UK news chiefs admit ‘mistakes’ but defend Gaza reporting


BBC and Sky News executives push back against criticism levelled by pro-Palestinian groups over 'media bias'

Protesters gather outside the BBC Scotland during a show of solidarity with the Palestinian people in Glasgow on 14 October 2023

Alex MacDonald reports in Middle East Eye on 7 March 2024:

British TV news heads have admitted “mistakes” were made in their coverage of the war in Gaza, but defended their reporting at a meeting in the Houses of Parliament.

Speaking at an event hosted by the Centre For Media Monitoring (CFMM), senior executives at BBC News and Sky News said they had attempted to take on board criticism about their reporting, which pro-Palestinian groups say has been too sympathetic to Israel at the expense of the people of Gaza.

“It is a uniquely difficult story to cover and we are striving to cover the story impartially and to bring clarity to the audience but that is very difficult in a story that is highly polarised,” said Richard Burgess, director of news content at the BBC.

Responding to criticisms made by CFMM in a report launched on Wednesday, Burgess said that as a 24-hour news service it was inevitable that there would be mistakes made.   “I hope we are transparent about that when we do it,” he said. “It’s impossible not to make mistakes, we will make mistakes.”

Despite this, he hit back at the suggestion that the BBC had a pro-Israel bias or that it had succumbed to political pressure in its coverage.  “We get incoming from all sides … but we have to be steadfast in maintaining our core values and in this story that is more important than ever before,” he said.

He acknowledged that there had been unhappiness from some members of staff “from both sides of the argument” but insisted that the BBC had been impartial in its coverage.  “We absolutely resist lobbying from every side,” he said.

‘Media bias’
The new report by CFMM, which is a project of the Muslim Council of Britain, examined “media bias” in the coverage of the conflict.

There has been anger from Palestinian campaigners and officials at much of the international media reporting of the conflict.  Marwan Yaghi, a diplomat for the Palestinian Mission in the UK, described the media coverage as “appallingly biased”.  Speaking on Wednesday at the CFMM event, on the same panel as Burgess, Yaghi said that when reporting on atrocities committed against Palestinians all details were “qualified to within an inch of its life”.

Having analysed more than 200,000 articles and TV reports, the CFMM report said the British media landscape had been guilty of failing to represent the conflict in Gaza in a fair manner.

The report suggested that Israelis were 11 times more likely to be to referred to as “victims of attacks” compared to Palestinians, while 76 percent of online articles framed the conflict as an “Israel-Hamas war”, while only 24 percent mentioned “Palestine/Palestinian”, which they said indicated a lack of context.

It also said there was lack of scrutiny around a number of stories perpetuated in the press, noting 361 mentions of the discredited beheaded babies story and only 52 challenges made of it.

Jonathan Levy, managing director and executive editor at Sky News, praised the report and said it raised a number of important points.

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