9th December 2002
Mr Damazer,
BBC Editorial,
BBC,
Wood Lane,
London
Dear Mr Damazer,
We have been following the BBC's coverage of the Intifada in Palestine and
note that:
a) In the recent past your reports used to include the latest cumulative
tally of Israelis and Palestinians that have been killed in the second
Intifada - but this seems not to be included any more. Our information
indicates that the numbers killed so far include at least 1707
Palestinians and 668 Israelis. Is there a reason this is not mentioned any
more?
b) In the late 1980's the BBC used to refer to 'Arab East Jerusalem'.
However, we have not heard this phrase for some time now - only
'Jerusalem' is used. As you know, the Israelis have 'annexed' East
Jerusalem, but this move is not recognized by the United Nations nor by
our own government, which views East Jerusalem as being under illegal
occupation. We would ask that your reporters clarify whether they are
reporting from occupied Jerusalem or not - to do otherwise implies a
recognition of Israel's illegal occupation and expropriation of
Palestinian lands.
We are raising these issues because we are quite concerned about the
misconceptions that persist about the Israel/Palestine conflict amongst
the general public. A report by the Glasgow University Media Group last
year found astonishingly that more British people believe that it is
Palestinians who are occupying Israeli land rather than vice versa. This
is perhaps not surprising given that the historical background to the
long-running conflict in the Middle East is rarely mentioned in news
reports.
Yours sincerely,
Mr Inayat Bunglawala
Secretary,
Media Committee,
The Muslim Council of Britain