Thursday, 23 November 2023

BBC headline claim on October 7 deaths is clear disinformation and a dangerous deception - Part 3

Further exchange with BBC (previous correspondence here and here). 

  

Enquiry now raised to Stage 2 level for consideration by the BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit (ECU). 



From the BBC

22 November 2023 


Dear Mr Hilley,


Ref: CAS-7679120-B1Y1G2-1


Thank you for getting in touch again about BBC News.


The BBC’s Editorial Guidelines refer to due accuracy and due impartiality, which is to say the accuracy and impartiality must be adequate and appropriate to the output, taking account of the subject and nature of the content, the likely audience expectation and any signposting that may influence.


What other media outlets report is a matter for them, but we will monitor developments about the killings as the story unfolds.

 

This concludes Stage 1 of our complaints process. That means we can’t correspond with you further here. If you remain unhappy, you can now contact the BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit (ECU). The ECU is Stage 2 of the BBC’s complaints process. You’ll need to explain why you think there’s a potential breach of standards, or if the issue is significant and should still be investigated. Please do so within 20 working days of this reply.


Full details of how we handle complaints are available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/handle-complaint/.


How to contact the ECU:


We’ve provided a unique link for you in this email. This will open up further information about how to submit your complaint. You’ll be asked for the case reference number we’ve provided in this reply. Once you’ve used the link and submitted your complaint, the link will no longer work.


This is your link to contact the ECU if you wish: 


Click Here

 

Best wishes,


Sean Moss

Assistant Editor

News Editorial Standards

www.bbc.co.uk/complaints 


…………………………………….


To the Executive Complaints Unit (ECU)

23 November 2023


Ref: CAS-7679120-B1Y1G2-1


The BBC have reported, without any apparent challenge, both of Israel’s claims that Hamas killed 1400/1200 people on and around 7 October. 


Two initial questions arise here. Aren’t both these numbers too precisely rounded, and therefore  suspect? And why take Israel’s claims alone without corroborating evidence?


The more specific point of my enquiry concerns the people who were not killed by Hamas on and around 7 October. It’s about the people killed by Israeli forces. 


Strong, available evidence indicates that Israeli forces killed a significant number of Israelis on and around 7 October. 


That key information is not stated in the repeated BBC headline that “Hamas killed 1400/1200 people”. 


Further to my previous references, please see this well-informed article, drawing together all the main sources and evidence, to date.


https://electronicintifada.net/content/evidence-israel-killed-its-own-citizens-7-october/41156


Whatever one thinks about what happened on those days, the claim that Hamas alone killed 1400/1200 Israelis has not been verified, and therefore cannot be justified as a BBC headline/statement. 


The BBC has clearly been reproducing a crucial untruth in publishing and broadcasting this unverified claim. 


I have written in my previous correspondence with the BBC about the key implications of this in terms of fostering public perceptions of the 7 October events, and, most crucially, what Israel has gone on to do in Gaza. 


In all such senses the BBC has a responsibility to convey clear and accurate information. This headline claim is clear disinformation. 


I wish the ECU to consider why the BBC decided to use, and continues to use, the wording “Hamas killed 1400/1200 people”. 


I wish the ECU to consider my request that the BBC withdraw this headline/statement with immediate effect. 


I wish the ECU to consider my request that the BBC issue a prominent statement conceding their culpability in producing and repeating this misleading headline, and issue a properly informed replacement headline/statement.

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