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So, I'm just wondering when the Balen Report will become public? I think they were defeated in the highest court of the land.
BBC panel finds broadcaster breached guidelines on Israel
By Cnaan Liphshiz, Haaretz Correspondent
In reporting about Israel, BBC's Middle East Editor has breached the corporation's guideline on accuracy and impartiality, an internal BBC complaints panel on Wednesday stated.
The Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland said that the findings show that the BBC has an anti-Israel "bias" and that the position of the editor, Jeremy Bowen, is "untenable." The corporation rejected these claims.
"The findings are extremely serious," Jonathan Hoffman, the Federation's co-vice chair, told Haaretz. "They demand urgent and visible action by the BBC to restore public confidence. The BBC should start by publishing the Balen Report, which it has spent five years and a reported £200,000 trying to keep under wraps."
The Balen Report from 2004 is an internal BBC document about alleged anti-Israel bias which the BBC, a public service based body and the world's largest broadcasting corporation - has been requested but refused to release.
The findings of the complaints committee released on Wednesday dealt with two articles: A written item entitled "How 1967 defined the Middle East" published in 2007, and a radio show called "From Our Own Correspondent" aired on BBC Radio 4 last year. The panel reviewed the items following complaints by a member of the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland.
In its review, the Trust Editorial Standards Committee panel found that the 1967 article breaches the guideline on accuracy in saying that Israel's settlements are "in defiance of everyone's interpretation of international law except its own," and in referring to Zionism's "innate instinct to push out the frontier".
In reviewing the complaint by Jonathan Turner from the Zionist Federation, the committee also found that a statement in the radio show saying that the Har Homa settlement was considered illegal by the United States, breached the BBC's guideline on accuracy. A BBC spokesperson told Haaretz that Bowen "had been informed that that was the American view by an authoritative source."
The committee also found fault in the use of the phrase "unfinished business" in the written article, which reads: "The Israeli generals, hugely self-confident, mainly sabras (native-born Israeli Jews) in their late 30s and early 40s, had been training to finish the unfinished business of Israel's independence war of 1948 for most of their careers."
While defining some of the findings in the panel's 72-page report as "particularly significant," the Zionist Federation complained that the document fails to offer correctional steps and that the committee's performance was lackadaisical in processing complaints.
"Even now the BBC Trust has not recommended any remedial action in the light of its findings, despite the fact that Mr. Bowen's article has been advertised for months on the main Middle East News Page," the Federation wrote in a statement.
"The BBC Trust took an inordinate length of time to address these complaints, which were filed in June 2007 and January 2008" the statement also said. "These delays have allowed Bowen and his colleagues to continue their biased coverage of Israel."
The Federation added it believed this has been "a significant contributor" to a recent rise in anti-Semitic incidents in the U.K. The Federation has called on the government to "bring the BBC under full regulation, like all other broadcasting media."
A BBC spokesperson reacted to this in saying: "We completely refute the assertion made by the Federation's that we have 'biased coverage of Israel' - this is a single, partially-upheld finding related to one piece of output about events that took place over forty years ago and our Middle East Editor was simply exercising his professional judgment on history."
The spokesperson referred to the Thomas Report from April 2006 on the matter, which said: "Apart from individual lapses, there was little to suggest deliberate or systematic [BBC] bias."
BBC panel finds broadcaster breached guidelines on Israel
By Cnaan Liphshiz, Haaretz Correspondent
In reporting about Israel, BBC's Middle East Editor has breached the corporation's guideline on accuracy and impartiality, an internal BBC complaints panel on Wednesday stated.
The Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland said that the findings show that the BBC has an anti-Israel "bias" and that the position of the editor, Jeremy Bowen, is "untenable." The corporation rejected these claims.
"The findings are extremely serious," Jonathan Hoffman, the Federation's co-vice chair, told Haaretz. "They demand urgent and visible action by the BBC to restore public confidence. The BBC should start by publishing the Balen Report, which it has spent five years and a reported £200,000 trying to keep under wraps."
The Balen Report from 2004 is an internal BBC document about alleged anti-Israel bias which the BBC, a public service based body and the world's largest broadcasting corporation - has been requested but refused to release.
The findings of the complaints committee released on Wednesday dealt with two articles: A written item entitled "How 1967 defined the Middle East" published in 2007, and a radio show called "From Our Own Correspondent" aired on BBC Radio 4 last year. The panel reviewed the items following complaints by a member of the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland.
In its review, the Trust Editorial Standards Committee panel found that the 1967 article breaches the guideline on accuracy in saying that Israel's settlements are "in defiance of everyone's interpretation of international law except its own," and in referring to Zionism's "innate instinct to push out the frontier".
In reviewing the complaint by Jonathan Turner from the Zionist Federation, the committee also found that a statement in the radio show saying that the Har Homa settlement was considered illegal by the United States, breached the BBC's guideline on accuracy. A BBC spokesperson told Haaretz that Bowen "had been informed that that was the American view by an authoritative source."
The committee also found fault in the use of the phrase "unfinished business" in the written article, which reads: "The Israeli generals, hugely self-confident, mainly sabras (native-born Israeli Jews) in their late 30s and early 40s, had been training to finish the unfinished business of Israel's independence war of 1948 for most of their careers."
While defining some of the findings in the panel's 72-page report as "particularly significant," the Zionist Federation complained that the document fails to offer correctional steps and that the committee's performance was lackadaisical in processing complaints.
"Even now the BBC Trust has not recommended any remedial action in the light of its findings, despite the fact that Mr. Bowen's article has been advertised for months on the main Middle East News Page," the Federation wrote in a statement.
"The BBC Trust took an inordinate length of time to address these complaints, which were filed in June 2007 and January 2008" the statement also said. "These delays have allowed Bowen and his colleagues to continue their biased coverage of Israel."
The Federation added it believed this has been "a significant contributor" to a recent rise in anti-Semitic incidents in the U.K. The Federation has called on the government to "bring the BBC under full regulation, like all other broadcasting media."
A BBC spokesperson reacted to this in saying: "We completely refute the assertion made by the Federation's that we have 'biased coverage of Israel' - this is a single, partially-upheld finding related to one piece of output about events that took place over forty years ago and our Middle East Editor was simply exercising his professional judgment on history."
The spokesperson referred to the Thomas Report from April 2006 on the matter, which said: "Apart from individual lapses, there was little to suggest deliberate or systematic [BBC] bias."
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Re: Anti-Israel Media Bias
Wed, April 15, 2009 - 2:37 PMis this surprising?
www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...2948.ece
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...News.html -
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Re: Anti-Israel Media Bias
Wed, April 15, 2009 - 2:54 PMNone the less, it appears even the BBC itself realizes they are biased.
4/15/09
BBC Trust Rules Against Mideast Editor Jeremy Bowen
Boston, MA - The BBC has determined that its Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen, had violated the broadcaster's ethical guidelines calling for impartiality and accuracy. The finding is likely to amplify concerns that BBC news coverage of the Arab-Israeli conflict is largely biased against Israel.
The March 31, 2009 decision by the Editorial Standards Committee (ESC), a unit of the BBC's top decision-making body, the BBC Trust, comes in response to a formal complaint filed by the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA), and a similar complaint filed independently by a member of the U.K.-based Zionist Federation.
CAMERA's complaint charged that Bowen's June 4, 2007 article about the Six-Day War and its aftermath was marred by "serious omissions, exaggerations and outright anti-Israel bias." The detailed complaint came before the ESC after the BBC News Web site and Editorial Complaints Unit defended Bowen's article.
In response to the ruling, CAMERA Senior Research Analyst Gilead Ini said that while ESC's willingness to openly fault unethical reporting by Bowen is important and encouraging, it is unclear that the BBC will draw appropriate conclusions from its findings and take concrete steps to combat the broadcaster's chronically biased reporting. "Acknowledging the glaring problems in this article is a good first step, but it's only a first step," he said. "The BBC also needs to consider the wider implications here. Not only did the senior BBC reporter in the Middle East show bias in his reporting, but he also made it clear, while defending his piece before the ESC, that he thinks it's reasonable to report from the Palestinian perspective and ignore other mainstream narratives."
Ini feels that the ESC findings and, especially, Bowen's "outrageously deceptive" attempts to defend his report, explain the journalist's past biased coverage and cast doubt on his suitability as a BBC reporter and editor. "There's good reason to be skeptical of Mr. Bowen's reporting," he said, "and by extension, the reporting of BBC reporters who are subordinate to him."
CAMERA is concerned that the ESC, despite having ruled that Bowen's reporting was not impartial, is apparently not calling on the reporter to be objective in future articles. Its ruling states that it is not necessary for Bowen to have given equal space to different views. "All that was required was a clear statement signposting that there were alternative theses subscribed to by respectable historians."
This assertion is inconsistent with the BBC's Editorial Guidelines, Ini argues. "If Jeremy Bowen consistently promotes only one point of view linked to a controversial subject and fails to relay in any real depth other prominent and reasonable views, the result is biased reporting," he said. "This is true regardless of whether or not Bowen throws in a sentence 'signposting' that other views exist."
The ESC finding that "the article had breached the guideline on impartiality" came after an independent advisor commissioned by the BBC described Bowen's assessment of the Six-Day War as being "firmly of the 'New Historian' kind," and "unqualified by an acknowledgment that the opposite or 'mainstream' opinion might have some weight too."
The advisor had also consulted with mainstream historian Martin Gilbert and revisionist historian Avi Shlaim, who both agreed that aspects of Bowen's piece were not accurate.
CAMERA will soon be posting on its website key excerpts from the complaint and the BBC rulings.
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CAMERA (the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America), a national non-profit media-monitoring organization headquartered in Boston, works to promote accurate, balanced and complete coverage of Israel and the Middle East. A non-partisan 501©3 organization, CAMERA takes no position with regard to American or Israeli political issues or with regard to ultimate solutions to the Arab-Israeli conflict. -
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Re: Anti-Israel Media Bias
Wed, April 15, 2009 - 3:43 PMhad you actually read the links I posted, you'd have realized that the BBC admitted its bias years ago.
Glad you finally decided to catch up. -
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Re: Anti-Israel Media Bias
Thu, April 16, 2009 - 1:38 AMAnd, for anybody actually interested in the subject. The actual findings of the trust.
www.bbc.co.uk/bbctrust/ap...indings.html
Next, hopefully, those memos. -
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Re: Anti-Israel Media Bias
Fri, April 17, 2009 - 2:40 AMWell, I guess not then. Well, at least the Spectator has an interest.
The BBC Trust Editorial Standards Committee has censured its Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen for breaching the BBC’s rules on impartiality and accuracy in his coverage of the Arab-Israeli conflict. The ruling was in response to a formal complaint filed by the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) and a similar complaint filed independently by a member of the UK’s Zionist Federation about two specific reports.
The first point to note is that, using the narrowest possible criteria to judge the items in question, the Trust found only relatively minor failings – conclusions which managed with singular obtuseness to ignore the real sting of what Bowen had said. For example, in his report to mark the 40th anniversary of the Six-Day War, ‘How 1967 Defined The Middle East’, the committee concluded about Bowen’s reference to ‘Zionism’s innate instinct to push out the frontier’
that this statement had been unqualified and, as a result it had not been clear and precise and that there had been a breach of the guideline on accuracy in this respect.
‘Unqualified’ seems to be a reference to differing views about the ‘innateness’ of Zionism – including the absurd justification by Bowen that, since the first Zionists had started with one kibbutz, the frontiers had clearly been pushed out to found the state itself! But since the history of Zionism has demonstrably involved not a pushing out of the frontier but a successive pulling back of the frontier – with the British first shrinking the putative Jewish homeland in Palestine by some 75 per cent, and then proposing to cut it in half, and with Israel subsequently giving up Sinai and Gaza and having offered to give up most of the West Bank in 1967 and in 2000 -- to criticise this statement for being merely ‘unqualified’ and not ‘clear and precise’ seems, to put it mildly, understated to the point of obduracy.
On Bowen’s statement that Israel showed a ‘defiance of everyone's interpretation of international law except its own’, the Trust found that
‘everyone’ was a loose use of language. It would have been perfectly possible to have qualified this as ‘nearly everyone’ or ‘the vast majority’, and that would have been acceptable.
This was a nod towards the fact that noted experts in international law, such as former U.S. Under-Secretary of State Eugene Rostow who was instrumental in drawing up the seminal UN Resolution 242, have said not only that the settlements are legal but have drawn attention to the fact that under still-binding Mandatory law Jews have been legally entitled to settle throughout the West Bank and Gaza for the past six decades.
What the committee chose completely to ignore was the innate (to coin a phrase) bias involved in focusing upon Israel’s alleged illegal actions while ignoring altogether the sustained illegality of the Arab states and the Arabs of the territories in maintaining their belligerency against Israel’s existence – in conspicuous defiance of international law since 1948; indeed, one might say since the 1920s – not to mention perpetrating acts of terrorism and promoting genocide. If the BBC’s Middle East Editor is fulminating against breaches of international law in the Middle East, doesn’t the most conservative interpretation of the word ‘impartiality’ in the BBC’s handbook necessarily mean that the Arabs’ egregious breaches of such law – the actual cause of the Middle East conflict -- should be acknowledged in such a report?
On Bowen’s statement that
the Israeli generals, hugely self-confident, mainly sabras (native-born Israeli Jews) in their late 30s and early 40s had been training to finish the unfinished business of Israel’s independence war of 1948 for most of their careers
the Trust found
that the phrase ‘hugely self-confident’ was used in this context to characterise the different attitudes to war between the native-born generals and the older, largely immigrant, politicians;
that this was a generalisation and that it would hold even if some of the generals had episodes of doubt or fear; and
that there had been no breach of the guideline on accuracy.
ii) On ‘unfinished business’
that, although the Middle East Editor stated that he had meant it to be understood that he was referring to the capture of East Jerusalem, it would have been impossible for a reader of the article to know which ‘unfinished business’ had been meant; and that there had been a breach of the guideline on accuracy with regard to the use of ‘clear, precise language’ in this respect.
To say that this language wasn’t ‘clear ‘or ‘precise’ enough is a judgment of quite perverse marginality. To accuse the Israelis in 1967 -- fighting a defensive war which they certainly had not sought; indeed, they were petrified of losing it and thought their end had come -- of trying to ‘finish the business’ of the previous war of self-defence they had fought in 1948 implies that both these events were wars of Israeli aggression rather than, as they actually were, defensive wars against annihilation. It’s as if Britain’s generals, after war was declared against Nazi Germany in 1939, stood accused of having been ‘training to finish the unfinished business of the fight against German aggression in 1914-18 for most of their careers’. As CAMERA observed at the time of Bowen’s report:
It is nothing short of shocking to read this last quote on the Web site of a mainstream media organization, as it absolutely turns reality on its head. It was not Israel, but rather the Arab world which by its own admission had sought to take care of the ‘unfinished business’ it had failed to achieve in 1948 — the destruction of Israel. This view was epitomized by Iraqi president Abdel Rahman Aref, who shortly before the war declared: ‘The existence of Israel is an error which must be rectified. This is our opportunity to wipe out the ignominy which has been with us since 1948.’
What was so outrageous about Bowen’s article was that it rewrote history and inverted victim and belligerent to suggest Israel was the aggressor in 1967, was stronger than the Arabs and had a lust for war. As Sir Martin Gilbert pointed out to the committee, this was simply historically wrong:
The Arabs were not ready for combat …but they were in a stronger position overall so it’s not an accurate reflection… To say ‘the Jewish Goliath had never been stronger…’ was not true – it was well armed to DEFEND itself against attack. I would disagree with that quite strongly.
But the reason the committee's criticisms of Bowen were so muted was that time and again it disregarded the opinion of Sir Martin Gilbert in favour of revisionist historian Avi Shlaim – Israel’s equivalent of Jon Pilger with a chip on his shoulder the size of Iraq against the Ashkenazi world.
The second point to note, however, is that although the complaints against Bowen were only partially upheld the wave of reaction from the Israel-bashers to this limited censure of such obscenity has been enormous. This is because, regardless of the details, any finding of bias or inaccuracy by the BBC Trust against its most senior Middle East journalist is of the greatest significance. It is the first time the BBC has acknowledged specific bias in its Middle East reporting -- thus itself puncturing the assiduously created myth that any claims of such bias are merely a reflection of the absence of objectivity amongst those Jews who claim this to be so. The reputation of BBC News as a global kitemark of objectivity is accordingly badly tarnished – all the more so because, to fend off precisely such accusations of bias towards Israel (which led to the commissioning of a report on the BBC’s Middle East coverage by Malcolm Balen, publication of which the BBC has actually gone to court to prevent and which remains secret to this day) Bowen was appointed Middle East editor in order to remove any accusations of bias.
Hence the foaming fury amongst the Israel-bashers, whose edifice of lies is maintained by casting critics who dare to call this by its proper name as a supremely manipulative lobby merely peddling their own paranoid propaganda -- and whose nefarious power is supposedly proved in turn by their very protests. Indeed, calls by Jews for this committee’s findings to lead to further action -- along with criticism of the BBC's own attempt to paper over the crack that has now opened up in its own facade -- are being seized upon by the Israel-bashers as further confirmation of the World Jewish Conspiracy, just as criticisms by Jews of the committee’s findings as weak are being seized upon as further confirmation of the World Jewish Conspiracy.
In the Independent, Robert Fisk appeared to be at risk of an aneurysm as a result of the committee’s report. The ‘cruelly named’ Trust was
pusillanimous, cowardly, outrageous, factually wrong and ethically dishonest... pitiful... preposterous... nauseous (sic)
all because it offered highly circumscribed criticisms of a perspective that to Fisk cannot be gainsaid in any way, shape or form because the Original Sin of Israel is the Revealed and Perfect Truth. Just think what would have happened to poor Fisk’s health had the BBC Trust upheld the complaints in full!
Indeed, so completely and utterly unbelievable is it that the Bowen /Fisk axis of propaganda can be faulted on anything at all that seemingly there can be only one explanation for what has happened. The BBC Trust’s Editorial Standards Committee members are apparently incapable of having reversed the axis of the earth like this all by themselves. To Fisk, they have been manipulated into doing so by the evil of evils, the Israel lobby, which clearly has truly demonic power to take hapless BBC committee members, shut down their brain function and turn them into zombie-like pawns of the Zionazi conspiracy. It is the Protocols of the Elders of Portland Place.
Truly, Fisk is a national treasure. If there was ever any doubt that Israel and the Jewish people were up against a truly malevolent and irrational force, Robert Fisk repeatedly lays it to rest.
Bowen and Fisk -- the Mutt and Jeff of the Israel-bashing media world.
The Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP. All Articles and Content Copyright
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