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David Rose

ByDavid Rose, Politics & Investigations Editor

Opinion

For the BBC, Jews really don’t count

It seems there is an exception to the ways BBC impartiality rules are applied – when the hate speech victims are Jews, and especially Zionist Jews

October 27, 2022 11:18
bbc
London, United Kingdom - January 17 2021: Broadcasting House, BBC headquarters in Central London, exterior view.
3 min read

When it wants to, the BBC is capable of acting very swiftly to protect its reputation for both impartiality and the abhorrence of hate speech. This week, just hours after presenter Martine Croxall told the BBC News Channel’s The Papers programme that she felt “gleeful” at Boris Johnson’s withdrawal from the Tory leadership race, the Corporation announced she had been taken off air, pending an investigation.

“I shouldn't probably laugh”, she had said. “I'm probably breaking some terrible due impartiality rule by giggling." And indeed, it appeared she had: according to a stern BBC statement next morning, “BBC News is urgently reviewing last night's edition of The Papers on the News Channel for a potential breach of impartiality.

"It is imperative that we maintain the highest editorial standards. We have processes in place to uphold our standards, and these processes have been activated."

Similarly, when I revealed in a national newspaper in 2021 that the BBC Arabic channel had repeatedly broadcast vile homophobic comments, the response was instant.