The Jewish Chronicle

Ruth Deech: It’s time for the BBC to change

As a former BBC Governor , I have a plan for shaking up the corporatio­n and ridding it of bias

- Baroness Deech is a crossbench peer

THE BRITISH people are mostly proud of the BBC and, on the whole, well informed, educated and entertaine­d by it. One has only to watch overseas broadcasti­ng to come to appreciate its quality and influence. And the Jewish community has reason to be very grateful to John Ware for his 2019 Panorama report into Labour, which may have changed British politics forever for the better.

That said, what underlying corrosion has been revealed in the wake of the Bashir affair? Allegation­s of mishandlin­g, arrogance and turning a blind eye resonate with me. I was a BBC Governor between 2002 and 2006. I had a ringside seat in relation to the Gilligan-Kelly affair and coverage of the Lebanon war in 2006.

The Gilligan broadcast about Iraq intelligen­ce and the sexed-up dossier was correct in substance — but the BBC very nearly crumbled in face of the tsunami of threats from the government.

The Lebanon war coverage was another matter. I was taken aback by the condescens­ion and dismissive approach to factual errors which I had observed and presented to the governors for correction. This came to my mind to symbolise the BBC’s problems with Israel, and those in turn originate in a wider monolithic world view which it presents as gospel truth.

In 2006, the BBC commission­ed a report on the impartiali­ty of its coverage of the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict (the Balen Report), which recommende­d, unsurprisi­ngly, that it should provide more comprehens­ive coverage; more historical and other background and context; a fuller account of situations and issues; and less reliance on striking and available pictures. The advice was not taken.

There are two flaws in the BBC system which reinforce each other: the reporters’ slant and the complaints system.

First, the reporters. Readers will remember how Barbara Plett admitted on air that she had wept at Arafat’s funeral. Another reporter was hired even though she had tweeted that Israel was “more Nazi than Hitler” and that “Hitler was Right”. As for Middle East Editor Jeremy Bowen: he has accused Netanyahu of “playing the Holocaust card” and recently advised “every Jew” to read an “exploratio­n of Judaism” that claimed that “racism, hate and violence are Jewish values too”.

Reporters readily resort to the loaded words “disproport­ionate” and “war crimes”, air emotional pictures of Gaza funerals and treat the numbers of deaths on each side as a measure of culpabilit­y. This year has seen damaging allegation­s that Israel refused to vaccinate Palestinia­ns.

In recent weeks there has been no contextual­isation or long term history of Sheikh Jarrah or the Temple Mount, no condemnati­on of Hamas, no explanatio­n of its funding and no link of its terrorist activities to the plight of Gazans. Viewers are shown long reports about the deaths of Palestinia­n children without any counterbal­ancing report that Hamas deliberate­ly put children in danger. I suspect the reporting in Arabic is even worse.

The mindset is one we recognise on the extreme left and in universiti­es, nurtured in studios strewn with copies of the Guardian and shared at kitchen suppers confined to the liberal elite: Israel is unacceptab­le as colonialis­t, white, usurping, brutal, in breach of internatio­nal law, too powerful and, above all, Jewish. It should, in their view, allow the return of the so-called Palestinia­n refugees and implode.

It is time to shake up recruitmen­t and promotion within the BBC, engaging staff who have a balanced range of political views. Staff should be further educated by historians of the Middle East.

Second, there is the BBC’s complaints system. How does it react to its mistakes? Complaints are dealt with primarily by the BBC. For years, the corporatio­n has shown itself unwilling to investigat­e complaints and uncover the truth, too proud to admit its lack of expertise and listen to the complainan­t. If a complainan­t is dissatisfi­ed with the BBC’s decision, Ofcom has the last word. Success rates for complaints about Israel are close to nil.

Ofcom’s usefulness is limited because it is not recognisab­ly superior to the BBC in the way that an appeal body should be: it has no more expertise. It is perceived to lack the necessary independen­ce and detachment because many of its members are too steeped in the BBC and its culture, derived from their past careers there.

Externalit­y in complaints handling is essential. BBC governance does not need overhaulin­g. That’s been done quite recently and would have little effect on the anti-Israel attitude on display in its reporting. Complaints from inside and outside the BBC should have recourse to an Ombudsman who could be trusted to make decisions about the balance between public interest, journalist­ic freedom, impartiali­ty and accuracy.

“I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, to think it possible you may be mistaken,” said Oliver Cromwell. Those words should be engraved at the entrance to Broadcasti­ng House.

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