Open letter to samir shah: the bbc and its jewish audience | thearticle

Open letter to samir shah: the bbc and its jewish audience | thearticle


Play all audios:


Dear Mr Shah Many congratulations on your appointment as the new Chairman of the BBC. It is a historic moment to see the first non-White Chairman of the BBC (though not, of course, as some


have said, the first member of an ethnic minority to be appointed Chairman, since that honour belongs to your predecessor, Richard Sharp). You face many challenges and I wish you every


success with changing the BBC for the better. One issue which I hope will be in your in-tray is the loss of confidence of so many British Jews in the BBC, as a result of its biased coverage


of the war between Israel and Hamas over the past weeks. Two recent polls stand out. On 8 December, _The Jewish Chronicle_ published the results of a poll it conducted. Those surveyed were


asked whether they agreed that BBC coverage of the war between Israel and Hamas was “biased” or “very biased” against Israel. 51% said it was “very biased” and 27% said that it was “biased”.


According to this poll, over three quarters of British Jews view the BBC as more or less biased against Israel. More recently, a poll for the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) revealed


that 86% of British Jews disagreed with the statement: “Overall, I am satisfied with the BBC’s coverage of the Israel-Hamas crisis.” Of these, 71% strongly disagreed and 15% disagreed. Only


3% agreed with the statement whilst 1% strongly agreed. A BBC spokesperson responded to the CAA poll, “The BBC holds itself to high standards of impartial reporting and rejects the


suggestion that we are biased against Israel.” They continued, “Our own audience research shows that BBC News is considered the most impartial provider for coverage of the conflict. BBC News


will continue to listen carefully to all audience feedback.” The complacency of this response is breathtaking. They offered no argument or evidence to show why the concern of so many


British Jews with BBC bias is unfounded and, worse still, showed no apparent concern that the BBC seems to be letting down so many Jewish licence payers. Just as complacent, but more


disturbing because it comes from the CEO, BBC News and Current Affairs, is a response to first wave of criticisms of the BBC’s news coverage of the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas.


She began, “I could not be prouder of the BBC’s journalists and our journalism. Over the past few days we have produced truly powerful coverage from inside Gaza, from Israel and from the


wider region.” This was just after many had condemned the BBC for refusing to call Hamas a terrorist organisation and the BBC’s woeful coverage on the night of the missile attack on the


Al-Aqsa hospital in Gaza City when Jon Donnison, an experienced reporter, asked if Israel might be responsible for the missile attack, told BBC viewers, “It’s hard to see what else this


could be, really, given the size of the explosion, other than an Israeli air strike, or several air strikes.” Christian Fraser, the presenter of _The Context_, should have told him that it


was too early to speculate — given that Donnison had no evidence at all, and was soon proven wrong — but he didn’t. A few weeks later, Jeremy Bowen, interviewed on a BBC news programme,


admitted that he incorrectly suggested the hospital “was flattened” following the blast, but said that he doesn’t regret “one thing” about his reporting. There have been numerous other


problems with the BBC’s coverage which has alienated Jewish viewers and listeners. Strident and self-righteous interviewing of Israeli spokesmen, very different in tone from interviews with


Palestinian speakers or with representatives from UN and international aid organisations; the insistence that the UN and its organisations in Gaza are neutral, even authoritative, sources;


the constant reliance on Palestinian Health Authority statistics, even though it was clear that this organisation is a front for Hamas, and the inability of the BBC to provide any of its own


data; the related failure to offer any proper analysis of the figures supplied by Hamas or of staged footage by Hamas, including a report by Jeremy Bowen which used such footage featuring a


Hamas actor who has appeared in numerous different guises during the conflict. Few, if any, within the BBC have openly criticised the BBC’s coverage. It is worth contrasting this silence


with an article by Danny Cohen, previously the Director of BBC Television, who said, “I think there’s institutional bias at play…That’s why it keeps happening. Mistakes happen once, perhaps


twice, but when they keep happening you have to ask why. I think there are institutional biases.” He added: “What’s clear to me is there is an ongoing issue with anti-Israel bias that there


appears to be an inability to control.” Writing in _The Telegraph_, Cohen called for an independent inquiry into antisemitism and anti-Israel bias at the BBC. “On a daily basis Britain’s


Jews are being harmed through its unbalanced reporting of the Israel-Hamas war and the failure of its senior management to get to grips with it,” he wrote. “This means that the time has now


come for a long overdue independent inquiry into the corporation’s editorial and management failures in its reporting of Israel.” Cohen is right. It is time for an independent inquiry into


the BBC’s coverage of Israel and, in particular, of the current conflict in Gaza. Almost twenty years ago the BBC commissioned the Balen Report, following persistent complaints from the


public and the Israeli government of allegations of anti-Israel bias in BBC news programmes. The report by a senior BBC journalist, Malcolm Balen, has still not been published. Following the


failure to publish the Balen Report and the complacent response to criticisms from the BBC’s current CEO, News and Current Affairs, it is hardly surprising that there is little confidence


among Britain’s Jewish community that BBC News can be trusted to handle an inquiry into bias by its own programme-makers, including some of its most senior reporters. There are a number of


outstanding candidates to head an independent inquiry: David Elstein, previously Director of Programmes at Thames, Head of Programming at BskyB and Chief Executive of Channel 5; Roger Mosey,


previously Head of BBC Television News, author of one of the best books written about BBC News (_20 Things That Would Make the News Better_) and currently Master of Selwyn College,


Cambridge; or Mark Damazer, formerly editor of _Newsnight_, editor of _The Nine O’Clock News_, Deputy Editor of BBC News, Controller of Radio 4 and Master of St. Peter’s College, Oxford.


Such an inquiry could not be more timely. First because of the loss of confidence in BBC News coverage of Israel by the overwhelming majority of Britain’s Jewish community. Second, because


BBC flagship news programmes are in crisis. _Newsnight_, facing significant budget cuts in the New Year, and Radio 4’s _Today_, losing its audience at a worrying rate, are among the chief


culprits in terms of bias. Third, and most disturbing of all, for the first time in its history it is not clear what kind of future the BBC has. Its defenders, especially within the BBC,


argue this is because of huge budget cuts as a result of real cuts in the licence fee. Its critics acknowledge the reality of these cuts, but claim this is a distraction from more serious


problems in programming: biased news coverage (first, Brexit, now Israel); political correctness, as in recent _Doctor Who _series; the cancelling or disappearance of too many popular


programmes, the latest being _Top Gear _and _A Question of Sport_; and the questionable appointment of too many bad presenters on once-popular BBC programmes. A robust independent inquiry


into bias in its news programmes would show that the BBC, under a new chairman, was starting to get a grip on its current crisis. And it would begin the task of rebuilding confidence in the


Corporation among Jewish license-payers. David Herman. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to


make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to continue publishing throughout these hard economic times. So please, make a donation._