The BBC finds itself in a serious controversy every few
years, but this is the mother of all.
The essence of the latest storm is this. A few days ago, the
Disasters Emergency Committee of the United Kingdom, an umbrella group of 13
leading charities, came out with a plan to launch a television appeal to raise
funds for humanitarian relief in Gaza. The umbrella organization includes names
like the British Red Cross, Save the Children, Care International and Oxfam.
The BBC refused to broadcast their appeal. Its Director-General, Mark Thompson,
and Chief Operating Officer, Caroline Thomson, came out with two reasons. The
corporation�s �impartiality would be compromised� and how could the BBC be
certain that money raised would go to the �right people�?
The refusal, and the reasons given, by the BBC have
infuriated many people in Britain and abroad, where World Service has a devoted
audience. There have been angry demonstrations in London. More than ten
thousand complaints had been received by Sunday and the number was growing.
Blogs and newspaper websites are inundated with messages attacking the decision,
despite a determined counter-offensive by a handful of pro-Israel entries that
keep repeating themselves. Leaders of all major political parties have
criticized the corporation. They include ministers in a British government that
pursues pro-Israel policies. Christian clergymen and prominent members of the
British Jewish community have called upon the BBC executives to reconsider
their decision.
The Archbishop of York summed it all up when he said, �It is
not a row about impartiality, but rather about humanity.� He compared the
situation to British military hospitals treating prisoners of war as a result
of their duty under the Geneva Conventions. �By declining the request of the
Disasters Emergency Committee,� the Archbishop said, �the BBC has already forsaken
impartiality.�
Not one BBC journalist I know agrees with the decision.
Writing in the Observer newspaper on January 25, the respected former Middle
East correspondent of the corporation, Tim Llewellyn, calls it �a cowardly
decision� that �betrays the values the BBC stands for.� John Kampfner, another
ex-correspondent, says in a recent article in the Guardian that, apart from
some honorable exceptions, the questioning of Israeli spokespeople during the
Gaza conflict has been weak compared with, for example, the widely-acclaimed
Channel 4 News. Kampfner�s verdict: Israeli officials have rarely been truly
pressed on BBC outlets.
During my 23 years as a BBC journalist, there were many
occasions when the corporation stood up to outside pressure. During the Suez
crisis in 1956, the British government tried to force the BBC to tow the line
in reporting the invasion of Egypt as it began to falter. The corporation
refused, despite a real risk that it might be shut down. When Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi of India acquired authoritarian powers under emergency rule in
the 1970s, foreign correspondents were ordered to submit all their reports to
the censors before filing. Mark Tully, the BBC Delhi correspondent, refused to
bow. Instead of submitting his reports to the censors, he took the next plane
to London.
In 1985, a month after British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher had proclaimed that �terrorists should be starved of the oxygen of
publicity,� she learned that a BBC documentary had interviewed a senior figure
in the IRA, which was conducting an armed campaign against British rule in
Northern Ireland. Thatcher�s government tried to ban the documentary, but it
was eventually shown. During my time as the BBC correspondent in Afghanistan
under the Communist regime of Najibullah, I was threatened with expulsion
several times. Every time, I handed in my passport to the relevant official and
asked him to issue an exit visa and expulsion order. I knew I had the support
from my employer. Every time, the Afghan government withdrew the threat.
Why is today�s BBC so timid? Not only is it due to the
relentless pressure on journalists and researchers since the launch of the �war
on terror� by George W Bush and Tony Blair. The failure of leadership at the
BBC has also played a part. The corporation, under its charter, broadcasts in
the national interest. It does so at its best when this obligation is
interpreted in the widest possible sense, meaning the �national interest� is
served by providing accurate, authoritative and the most wide-ranging
perspective on world events that the audiences will trust. The current
leadership of the BBC has failed in this important task. The refusal to
broadcast an appeal from the country�s leading charities for funds for
humanitarian work in Gaza, to which the British government itself will
contribute, is difficult to understand for most people.
Editorial independence is about resisting the bully. It
requires protection against susceptibilities to pressure from the powerful in
the interest of objectivity and the need to give proper coverage to the weak.
Some years ago, for expediency and in the name of efficiency, the BBC embarked
on a drive to set up large news bureaus in a number of big cities around the
world. One such bureau is in Jerusalem, from where much of the coverage of the
Middle East is done. The recent Gaza conflict has mostly been covered by BBC
correspondents standing in front of cameras miles away from the battle in the
safety of the Israeli side and under the close watch of their Israeli minders.
Today, the Israelis have a stranglehold on the BBC and the BBC will go to any
lengths not to offend them.
While the BBC, once the world�s best broadcaster and still a
good one, fights for its reputation, other British news outlets have decided to
broadcast the appeal for Gaza. They have accepted the assurance from the
Disasters Emergency Committee that it is the committee�s job to see the aid
reaches the right people. The Charity Commission supports this assurance. And
the BBC Director General stands isolated. Senior executives congratulate
themselves for their �excellent coverage� on their own channels. But the
corporation has been found deficient when compared to new media players like Al
Jazeera English and Press TV. With the latest storm over the Gaza appeal, the
BBC also risks losing the battle for the moral high ground. Imagine a day when
Al Jazeera carries an appeal by Britain�s Disasters Emergency Committee while
the British Broadcasting Corporation refuses.
Deepak Tripathi, former BBC
journalist, is a researcher and an author. His works can be found on deepaktripathilibrary.wordpress.com
and he can be reached at DandATripathi@gmail.com.