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Opinion

The BBC’s mistakes are an institutional problem

The issue now is whether its board and managers will stop the new chairman tackling it?

May 23, 2024 16:33
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BBC headquarters at New Broadcasting House (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images)
3 min read

I have spent decades defending the BBC. I always believed it to be the best broadcaster in the world, with the best journalists and the most rigorous standards.

Its public funding means it has a special duty to uphold impartiality and accuracy. But there are 200 territorial conflicts in the world and none of the others are covered in remotely the same way as Israel and Palestine.

About 180,000 people have died in Myanmar where 18.6 million need humanitarian aid, but we don’t hear about that very much on the BBC. Even the war in Ukraine no longer attracts the same scrutiny as Israel’s campaign against Hamas. Yemen is suffering the world’s biggest humanitarian catastrophe, but that hardly gets a look-in either.

Concerns about the BBC’s approach go beyond the war in Gaza. A particular low point was the appalling report which blamed schoolchildren celebrating Chanukah in Oxford Street for a racist attack in which they were the victims. Last July, after a wave of terror attacks in Israel, a breathless Jeremy Bowen dashed dramatically to Israel overnight – not to report on the civilian victims but to cover the IDF’s attempt to arrest the terrorists responsible.

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BBC