The Daily Telegraph

BBC boss: Iran-backed reporter ‘impartial’

- By Anita Singh ARTS AND ENTERTAINM­ENT EDITOR

A BBC News report on the Gaza conflict which used an Iranian-backed journalist as an eyewitness was “fair and impartial”, the corporatio­n’s news chief has claimed.

A report by the BBC Verify unit into Israeli troops opening fire on an aid convoy in Gaza included an account by Mahmoud Awadeyah, a journalist on the scene.

It later emerged that Mr Awadeyah works for the Tasnim News Agency, an Iranian outlet with links to the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps. His social media feed is said to include posts that appear to praise a January 2023 terrorist attack that left seven Israelis dead.

Mr Awadeyah’s history was highlighte­d earlier this week by The Telegraph. But when Deborah Turness, the chief executive of BBC News was asked about the report during a communicat­ions and digital committee session in the House of Lords, she said: “If you look at the data about our coverage of the Israel-gaza issue, it points to us being the most publicly trusted media outlet for impartial coverage.

“So we are happy that the way we approached that story is fair and impartial. BBC Verify approached the IDF (Israeli Defense Forces) as well on that story, and so obviously we feel that we were transparen­t in our journalism in that case.”

Ms Turness added: “BBC Verify seeks to get multiple eyewitness accounts from the ground and is very clear about where it sources them from”.

Addressing the committee, Ms Turness suggested that The Telegraph was biased in its coverage.

“In the very unfortunat­e incident where people were killed during the aid convoy event, we made no particular claims about the eyewitness­es. But what I would say is the report was positioned in a hostile media outlet which has always reported negatively on the BBC’S coverage of the Israel-gaza issue.”

The Telegraph reported in January that Jewish staff working for the BBC had lodged formal complaints about anti-semitism, including the corporatio­n’s coverage of the conflict.

Asked if the BBC would be investigat­ing the way in which it represente­d Mr Awadeyah in the report, Ms Turness said: “We will look at that. But for now we believe that the journalism was good, and it was an account of what eyewitness­es were telling BBC Arabic journalist­s on the ground at the time.

“Where we’ve made any mistakes, we do put our hands up.” she added.

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