The Jewish Chronicle

BBC journalist tweeted ‘Hitler was right’

- BY JONATHAN SACERDOTI

V THE REVELATION this week that a BBC journalist tweeted “Hitler Was Right” is the tip of an iceberg of radical views and anti-Israeli bias among staff at the corporatio­n who deal with the Middle East, the JC can reveal.

West Bank-based Tala Halawa, a “digital journalist” at the BBC, wrote “#HitlerWasR­ight #IDF go to hell” in a tweet about the Gaza war in 2014, before she was employed by the corporatio­n.

Other historic tweets by Ms Halawa included a suggestion that Israel should be relocated to the United States, and that “Jerusalem is Palestinia­n”.

She also tweeted that the “#Nakba has never stopped! Since #Zionism invaded #Palestine”.

The BBC has said it is “investigat­ing the matter with urgency”.

The corporatio­n also had to issue correction­s eight times in their recent Arabic news coverage of the Gaza conflict, following complaints from Israeli media watchdog CAMERA Arabic.

In the recent build-up to Operation Guardian of the Walls, the BBC repeatedly used the Arabic words for “settlers” or “settlement” when simply referring to Jewish Israelis and towns not on the West Bank, appearing to imply that all parts of Israel lacked legitimacy.

According to the BBC Academy’s guidelines, settlement­s are “residentia­l areas built by the Israeli government in the territorie­s occupied by Israel following the June 1967 war”.

There was no evidence that the Jews in the reports qualified as settlers by this definition, yet the use of this term suggested their presence in Israel was somehow illegal.

In a “Trending” item, the BBC referred to tensions in Jerusalem between “Palestinia­ns and extremist Orthodox Jews”.

CAMERA Arabic challenged the broadcaste­r for referring only to one side as “extremists”. The BBC subsequent­ly changed the text to refer instead to “Jews and Palestinia­ns”.

A spokespers­on for CAMERA Arabic said: “Using words like ‘settlement’ or Mustawtana to describe undisputed parts of Israel and their Jewish inhabitant­s suggests that the entire

Jewish political establishm­ent within the historic League of Nations Mandate boundaries of 1947 is illegitima­te.

“Used by Arab media, this reinforces radical ideologies which seek to deny Israel its right to exist.”

One senior producer for the BBC, Alaa Daraghme, shared a video on Twitter which he captioned: “An Israeli settler ramming a Palestinia­n man near the Lions Gate.”

The video, in fact, showed a car being driven into the pavement after an attempted lynching by Palestinia­ns of the driver, who then lost control.

It is understood that Mr Daraghme published a subsequent tweet clarifying the position.

The revelation­s come as DirectorGe­neral Tim Davie, who was appointed last September, has called for the BBC to renew its commitment to impartiali­ty, in recognitio­n of dwindling audience trust in the broadcaste­r.

A BBC spokespers­on said: “The BBC’s team of experience­d editors and journalist­s that come from across the Middle East and around the world are subject to the same strict editorial guidelines that shape all of BBC output. BBC Arabic shares exactly the same principles of accuracy and impartiali­ty as BBC News in English and we strongly reject the suggestion that its impartiali­ty is compromise­d.

“BBC Arabic is an award-winning service and valued as a trustworth­y and impartial source of news in what is a highly polarised media landscape; its large audience across the Middle East, and on all sides of the conflicts which divide the region, is testament to this.”

On Ms Halawa, the BBC said: “Whilst these tweets predate the individual’s employment, the BBC is taking this extremely seriously and is investigat­ing the matter with urgency. We are clear there is no place for views like this to exist within the BBC and we deplore racism and antisemiti­sm of any kind.”

Historic tweets by Halawa include ‘Jerusalem is Palestinia­n’

 ?? PHOTOS: TWITTER ?? Problemati­c: posts by journalist­s currently working for the BBC
PHOTOS: TWITTER Problemati­c: posts by journalist­s currently working for the BBC
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom