The Jewish Chronicle

Chief Rabbi had secret meeting with BBC chief over Oxford Street coverage

- BY KIRSTY BUCHANAN CHIEF REPORTER

V CHIEF RABBI Ephraim Mirvis held a secret meeting with BBC Director-General Tim Davie over the corporatio­n’s controvers­ial coverage of the Oxford Street hate attack, the JC has learnt.

The unpreceden­ted meeting at Broadcasti­ng House last Thursday was the first time the Chief Rabbi has ever raised specific editorial concerns with the BBC’s Director-General. The talks were said to be “constructi­ve”.

It comes amid ongoing anger over the BBC’s reporting of the antisemiti­c attack on Chanukah last November, which featured a disputed claim that the Charedi victims of the abuse could be heard using an anti-Muslim slur.

The coverage is now the subject of a probe by media watchdog Ofcom, which has said it is looking into whether the corporatio­n breached accuracy rules.

In further humiliatio­n for the BBC, last week it was forced retract a claim that the Community Security Trust had verified the Muslim slur claim in a conversati­on with a BBC reporter.

CST Chief executive Mark Gardner told the JC: “Glad we got this turned around, but obviously it should never have been needed.”

A spokesman for the BBC said: “The Director General was very pleased to meet the Chief Rabbi and they had an open, positive and constructi­ve discussion.”

The announceme­nt by Ofcom came in the wake of a internal investigat­ion by the BBC’s Executive Complaint Unit which ruled the corporatio­n was wrong to categorica­lly state that an anti-Muslim slur could be heard from the bus where Jewish teenagers took shelter as they were spat at and abused by a gang of thugs. In a statement to the JC, the youngsters denied they had uttered any anti-Muslim remark.

The Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm organised a second protest against the BBC at its headquarte­rs in London last week.

CAA projected onto Broadcasti­ng House what it claimed were examples of BBC bias against Jews and antisemiti­sm from the past 18 months.

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