To Helen Boaden,
Director BBC News
Dear Ms Boaden
On 24 August 2010, the BBC Today programme's Steve Evans conducted  an interview with Gro Nystuen from Norway's Council of Ethics. (1)
Mr Evans wanted to know why her department, part of the Ministry of Finance, had made the decision to divest from two leading Israeli construction companies operating in the West Bank, Africa Israel Investments and Danya Cebus. (2)
The Norwegians took the divestment decision   in recognition of international law which regards the West Bank settlements as illegal.
Please could you answer the following questions:
1.  Why was the specific segment (06.22.55 BST; i-player: 0.22.55) on the Norwegian  decision to divest from these two Israeli companies, and the defence of that action from Gro Nystuen, removed from the Today programme's playlisting  and only later reinstated? (3)
2.  Why did Steve Evans adopt this particular, persistent, narrow and hostile line of questioning vis-à-vis China when he could, and should, have explored the more  substantive issue of Israel's illegal occupation, the  settlements and how a  growing number of countries, like Norway, are following  international  law in refusing to deal with  companies engaged in the West Bank?
3.  Why did Steve Evans not caveat his remarks with an acknowledgement that Britain and most other Western countries actively engage in trade with China?
4.  Evans further suggests that the Norwegian government has a "leftist view of the world" which "beats our own people harder than other groups that might deserve a beating too".  Bearing in mind the BBC's codes on 'impartiality', on what proper basis does Evans use the words "our own people"?  And, in what sense should he express the opinion  that these "other groups" "deserve a beating too"?
5.  Evans further implies that the Norwegian fund is compromised due to the revenues accrued through  oil.  Does this also mean that the royalties flowing into the UK exchequer are likewise 'dirty' money?
I'd like specific answers to each of these five questions.
Sincerely
John Hilley
(1) My thanks to David Halpin and  Mary Bedforth for their  perceptive discovery and pursuit of this disturbing piece of BBC bias.
(2) http://mondoweiss.net/2010/08/norwegian-govt-is-divesting-from-2-companies-that-build-settlements.html
(3) http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00tfcy6/Today_24_08_2010/
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