Gary Lineker among 500 media figures urging BBC to reinstate Gaza documentary


Film and TV stars among those writing to corporation after it pulled Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone

A still from the BBC’s ‘How to Survive a Warzone’

Aamna Mohdin and Chris Osuh report in The Guardian on 26 Feb 2025:

Gary Lineker, Ruth Negga, Juliet Stevenson and Miriam Margolyes are among 500 film, TV and other media professionals calling on the BBC to reinstate its documentary on children and young people living in Gaza, describing it as an “essential piece of journalism”.

The broadcaster removed ‘Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone’ from BBC iPlayer pending a “due diligence” exercise after it emerged that the film’s 14-year-old narrator was the son of a deputy agriculture minister in the territory’s Hamas-run government.

Critics of the programme, including dozens of prominent Jewish journalists, condemned a failure of commissioning standards and questioned whether the BBC had paid any member of Hamas as part of the filming of the documentary.

A letter, sent on Wednesday to the BBC executives Samir Shah, Tim Davie and Charlotte Moore and seen by the Guardian, describes the film as “an essential piece of journalism, offering an all-too-rare perspective on the lived experiences of Palestinians”.

The letter claims that some criticism of the documentary is based on “racist assumptions and weaponisation of identity”, and that the deputy agriculture minister and father of the teenage narrator is a civil servant concerned with food production.  This broad-brush rhetoric assumes that Palestinians holding administrative roles are inherently complicit in violence – a racist trope that denies individuals their humanity and right to share their lived experiences,” it says.

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