MPs join Gaza protest against BBC

Photo by: Elad Brin
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By Mark Hookham
Political Editor

Fabian Hamilton, MP

THREE Leeds MPs have added their voices to the mounting criticism of the BBC for its refusal to televise an appeal for victims of the humanitarian disaster in Gaza.

John Battle (Leeds West, Lab), Fabian Hamilton (Leeds North East, Lab) and Greg Mulholland (Leeds North West, Lib Dem) have joined more than 100 other MPs in signing a parliamentary motion urging the corporation to reverse its decision.

The Disasters Emergency Committee’s two-minute Gaza Crisis Appeal was screened on Monday by ITV, Channel 4 and Five.

However, BBC bosses have insisted that airing the film would threaten its impartiality and that the corporation should not give the impression it was “backing one side” over the other.

Protests

The decision has sparked more than 15,500 complaints and protests at BBC Broadcasting House.

Mr Battle, a former junior minister, has also raised the issue with ministers at a Commons international development select committee.

Relatives of his sister’s husband live in Gaza and have given him first hand reports of the intense suffering caused by the bombing.

Fabian Hamilton, a member of Labour Friends of Israel, said: “To a child who has lost his parents and whose house is a pile of rubble it doesn’t matter whether it was Israelis or an earthquake. That child needs aid and our help. We have a duty to relieve that suffering.”

Greg Mulholland said he thought the BBC’s reasoning was “utterly flawed.”

A RALLY is to be staged outside the BBC’s regional HQ in Leeds to protest at the corporation’s refusal to broadcast a charity appeal for funds to help the people of Gaza.

The rally takes place this evening from 5pm to 7pm outside BBC Broadcasting Centre in St Peter’s Square, near Leeds bus station.

The BBC has refused to broadcast the appeal by the Disasters Emergency Committee which includes charities such as Christian Aid and Oxfam.

It says to do so might lead to accusations of “bias.”

Source: Yorkshire Evening Post, 28 January 2009


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One response to “MPs join Gaza protest against BBC”

  1. Scrutinizer Avatar
    Scrutinizer

    BBC’s recent interpretation of impartiality is exclusive and counter-intuitive. It jeopardizes the very purpose and mission of its World Service particularly the two new multi-million pounds services that it has recently launched.

    BBC World Service is funded by a grant-in-aid administered by the FCO, with a total budget of approximately £265m for 2008/09. Over £15m a year are being spent on BBC Persian channel lauched on 13 January 2009. On 19 January BBC’s Arabic television channel announced broadcasting 24 hours a day. This decison will raise the annual £19 million budget even higher. Such intitiatives are aimed to make audiences in the Middle East look favourably at British foreign policy initiatives for that region.

    Over £15m a year are being spent on BBC Persian channel lauched on 13 January 2009.

    On 19 January BBC’s Arabic television channel announced broadcasting 24 hours a day. This decison will raise the annual £19 million budget even higher. Such intitiatives also get funded from FCO and are aimed to make audiences in the Middle East look favourably at British foreign policy initiatives for that region.

    The way impartiality is invoked will add insult to the injury felt over BBC whose coverage during the Gaza crisis mainly confined itself to give a view from Jerusalem and report from the Israel’s border with Gaza.

    BBC is in desperate and urgent need to review how it interprets impartiality, balance and professionalism to avoid undermining the spirit of its present and future overtures to the world service audiences.

    How is BBC faring on account of its credibility since the recent conflict in Gaza? I hope BBC’s governing bodies will instruct its world services bureaus to run a survey amongst its audience. It is hoped that the results will help the BBC management determine if its clientele agree the way impartiality was invoked when broadcasting matters about Gaza. Gauging audiences sentiments will be a more wiser step to take rather than dragging the corporation in to controversies. Will someone stop BBC shooting itself in the foot time and time again?

    The more rigidity it shows the more BBC risks to compromise its credibility among its existing and potential audiences. BBC should instead spent its time and energy in setting example on how despite difficulties, high standards of credible and objective reporting can be established even in a tough terrain like the Middle East.

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