Become a Member
Opinion

Why does BBC find it hard to apologise to Jews?

The corporation reacted so differently when confronted with antisemitism and homophobia

October 15, 2021 12:23
bbc-arabic-radio-cover.jpg
3 min read

Last July, with the assistance of CAMERA Arabic, the Daily Mail revealed that BBC Arabic’s Trending programme has been broadcasting openly homophobic content without criticism or the provision of necessary context. On multiple occasions over the past two years it featured, for example, hateful social media comments calling for the sentencing of homosexuals to life imprisonment, blaming them for the emergence of Covid-19 and arguing that raising “their” rainbow flag is a sign of “moral decline”. All the comments were presented as legitimate voices of the “Arab street”, as though their authenticity somehow absolved them from being challenged on air.

In response to the Daily Mail’s inquiry, the BBC issued the following apology (italics by me): “These broadcasts did not meet our editorial standards and we apologise to our viewers. The format of BBC Trending is to reflect debate across the Arab world and examine opposing views on social media. While it is appropriate that we reflect a range of views and debate in our coverage, we should have challenged some of them robustly or provided context around them. On these occasions we failed to do this and should not have broadcast the tweets in full. We will be implementing further staff training with a focus on LGBTQ coverage.”

Two months later, again with CAMERA Arabic’s help, the JC revealed that the same BBC Arabic programme indulged in the same offensive practice towards Jews and Israelis as well. In April 2020, Trending broadcast a comment celebrating the future elimination of Israel by means of war and the subsequent mass expulsion of its Jewish citizens. Another comment, from September 2019, suggested that “Zionist terrorism […] masters the German government”.

The exposé also demonstrated how additional hateful comments were edited by BBC Arabic in order to make them appear less violent. For example, a claim that “the Jews [...] control the world’s resources” had been removed from a comment prior to its showing on screen. Another manipulated comment originally included praise for Suleiman Khater — an Egyptian soldier who killed seven unarmed Israeli tourists in 1985 — which was omitted in the broadcast version.

Topics:

BBC