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Opinion

Whatever we do, the media will not stop propaganda on Gaza

Sadly, the new report on Gaza casualty figures will not change the narrative

December 17, 2024 11:02
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A new report by the Henry Jackson Society claims to have found significant errors in the Gaza health ministry's casualty figures. (Photo by YAHYA HASSOUNA/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

I mean no disrespect to Andrew Fox and the team of researchers behind a report published this week, entitled Questionable Counting: Analysing the death toll from the Hamas-run Ministry of Health in Gaza, when I say that there is nothing even remotely surprising in it.

Great respect, in fact: retired major Andrew Fox has produced a vital, compelling and necessary report that should be studied by every journalist and commentator writing or speaking about the Gaza war.

The substance of the report – that the Hamas-run health ministry has deliberately misrepresented Gaza casualty figures to portray Israel as having targeted civilian populations – may be old news to anyone who has come to the story without an axe to grind against Israel, but the report’s forensic analysis of every aspect of the figures makes it impossible for anyone to continue citing them in good faith.

But therein lies the problem. Because good faith, and a desire to be objective and report the facts rather than to proselytise for a cause, are in short supply when it comes to coverage of Israel.

Topics:

Gaza