Showing posts with label BBC Propaganda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC Propaganda. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Observations on Maulana Wahiduddin Khan’s article: Babri Masjid Revisited in THE TIMES OF INDIA - By Ghulam Muhammed

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Observations on Maulana Wahiduddin Khan’s article: Babri Masjid Revisited in THE TIMES OF INDIA


Post- Allahabad High Court ‘Ayodhya Verdict’, Indian media had a field day in plastering its pages and its colourful screens with what can be divided as a ‘Hindutva Narrative’ and a ‘Left liberal Narrative’. The glaring omission was that of a ‘Muslim Narrative’, which has always been gagged by the non-Muslim owned media and could hardly get any mass audience.

Times of India, that claims to be the leader of the pack in English language media, has finally decided to bring in the Ulama and had strategically selected a writer whose credentials as a peacenik is most admired by the aggressive Hindutva elements while Maulana’s own community by and large has completely sidelined him.

His article is a regurgitation of Maulana’s old stand for Muslims to follow the spirit of Prophet’s Hudaibiya peace agreement with the idol worshipers of Mecca, when he agreed to refrain from any violent engagement for which he had come prepared and preferred to negotiate for a peace treaty, giving him a foot inside a closed door. His stand is sound as a broad guideline, but alas Maulana cannot be a patch on the charisma and leadership of the Prophet while Muslims too are not united and so committed to the Hudaibiya peace initiative, given great differences in time, place and the composition of the adversaries.

In his article, Maulana has cited the case of Caliph Omar, who was offered space by the Church authorities to pray his Salaat in the Church of Resurrection of Jerusalem, when Jerusalem was conquered by Muslim forces and the citizenry insisted that any surrender treaty with rights and responsibilities should be signed by the Caliph Omar himself. Caliph declined, saying that that indiscretion may be become an excuse for future Muslim generations to claim the right to pray in Christian churches.

Maulana writes:

“The Christian bishop told him he could offer his prayers inside that very church. But the caliph refused. He said that he would offer his prayers at a stone's throw from the church. If he offered his prayers right there inside the church, it would create a controversy in the future. The Muslims of later generations would say that they would build a mosque there because their caliph had offered prayers there.

Notwithstanding this historic example, Mir Baqi built a mosque adjoining a Hindu sacred place. This was bound to create problems.”

Maulana is trying to compare the two situations, which are as different as oranges from apples. After Muslim takeover, the Church became a dhimmi of the Muslim state. Muslims in India are full citizens of their country: India and are not dhimmis of a Hindu state.

A small minority of politically motivated and ideologically committed violent group of Hindutvadis are not the ruler of this nation. If they had been the rulers, they would have ruled India for the last 63 years, instead of Indian National Congress. Even after Babri demolition, they could not realize their dream of ruling India on the strength of their own committed vote bank. Some feel, they are surviving on Congress complicity. Muslims should not bow to their aggression. They do not represent the real ethos of Indian society.

It is another matter that Congress party with all its protestation of being secular had been riddled with the presence of highly communalized Hindutva protagonists.

Unlike Omar, these Hindutvadis, who pose as rulers of the country, did not offer to build their proposed Grand Ram temple away from the 500+ year old Babri Masjid.

Their contrived excuse about Ram Janambhoomi, (the place where their Lord Ram was born) being the same spot where the Masjid was, falls through, as in Ayodhya town itself, within stone throw of each other, there are scores of Ram Janambhoomi Temples, all claiming to be the birth place of Lord Ram.

To compound their mischief, they collected hundreds of thousands mobsters, through L. K. Advani’s Rath Yatra all over India and with the connivance of a Congress President and Prime Minister Narasimha Rao, demolished a Mosque in full view of a world audience glued to BBC’s live telecast, with its ace correspondent, Mark Tully as the prime witness to the mob mobilization and the destruction of the Babri Masjid.

L. K. Advani did not act like Caliph Omar, holding a far-sighted vision to avoid trouble in future generations; in fact he was the very anti-thesis of Caliph Omar as he went on to create trouble and division between Hindus and Muslims who had been living in peace for hundreds of years, even in the city of Ayodhya, with Masjid/Mandir as next door neighbors in hundreds of towns, cities and villages.

L. K. Advani had a political agenda and had nothing to do with the religious aspect of the Ram legend. His former daughter-in-law’s affidavit submitted to Liberhan Commission, details how irreligious Advani could have been.

Maulana accuses Muslims of provoking Hindutvadis in demolishing Babri Masjid, by not following Prophet’s example of Hudaibiya and handing over the Babri Masjid to Hindus.

The present context, with L. K. Advani’s political agenda of taking over Indian government by stirring up mob aggression, did not offer Muslims any choice but to resist the political mobilization against their community’s interests. The prophet had means to ensure his victory on the battle field and he chose to sign a treaty out of his magnanimity and his negotiation position of power equation. Muslims are not in power in India, to be offering such generous terms to a group of law-breakers. That would be submitting to blackmail and would be opening Pandora’s Box for further blackmail. Maulana is not into Applied Islamics, as envisioned by Dr. Javed Jamil of Saharanpur, or he would have taken into account all aspects of the imbroglio, before coming out with his facile advice to Muslims and become part of Muslim problem.

Maulana cites the goodwill and sagacity of Congress led by Narasimha Rao, when it passed the legislation called the Places of Worship Act, 1991, binding Government of India to maintain the status quo of all places of worship on the Indian soil as it stood in 1947. However, the sting is in the tail. The status quo ante for Babri Masjid as publicly promised by the same Narasimha Rao as Prime Minister of India was cleverly and exceptionally excluded from the ambit of the Act, with the spacious argument that the case is the courts. Congress has a long history of countermanding courts decisions with instant passing of amending legislation. The only reason that Babri Masjid was kept out of the Places of Worship Act- 1991, was Congress policy of hunting with the hounds and running with the hare. Besides, P. V. Narasimha Rao was an old RSS cadre that got infiltrated into Congress, thanks to his Brahmin identity and had extensive contacts with RSS as well as BJP and could be seen as sabotaging the permanent dynastic rule of Congress, in favour of a Hindutva alternative.

In fact, all the acts of omission and commission by this Congress President and Prime Minister during the Babri Masjid/ Ram Janambhoomi negotiation leading up to demolition of the Masjid, did damage Congress so much that it has never come back to its previous pre-Babri position of ruling India single-handedly, without the crutches of coalition partners. Muslim voters who had tolerated all adverse Congress moves like opening of the lock of the Babri Masjid for Hindu prayers et al. could see the hidden hand of a Congress President behind a blatant attack on their constitutional right of freedom of religion and consequently jilted Congress in droves. It is hard for them to trust Congress again.

Maulana further holds that Muslims subsequently took the very impractical line that the Masjid should be rebuilt on the same spot. Maulana gives the example of the relocation formula in some Arab countries. Maulana is fully aware that the majority of Indian Muslims follow Hanafi school of jurisprudence, which is in many ways different from Ahle-Hadith school of thought. The Gulf countries with Muslim rulers at the helm are influenced by Wahabi doctrines and as such are not acceptable to majority of Indian Muslims. Maulana cannot come out with solutions from one school of jurisprudence and impose it on adherents of other school of thought and that too to appease black-mailing adversaries. Besides, Indian Islam has its own distinct nuances and ethos, reflecting different level of adjustments with their compatriots, who are not Muslims. Such adjustment problems do not exist in Muslim countries and as such their alternatives are irrelevant to Indian context and polity.

Maulana holds that Muslim rejection of Allahabad High Court’s Ayodhya Verdict is an emotional reaction and not well-considered response. He feels that by their own mass mobilization on Shah Bano issue, when they forced the government to overrule a Supreme Court judgment, they have give others a precedent to follow. He poses a hypothetical question and offers a hypothetical answer. He wants to know that even if the Supreme Court gives the verdict in their favour, how the problem will be solved (to their satisfaction).

Maulana again errs when he compares Muslim mobilization on Shah Bano to the Hindutva mobilization on Babri Masjid. Shah Bano mobilization was peaceful and within the limits of India’s democratic tradition. That cannot be said about Babri Masjid/ Ram Janambhoomi mobilization of hundreds of thousands of Kar Sevaks demolition a 500-year old Mosque. They got away as they had an old RSS hand at the head of the Government. That may not be the case, next time around. The deciding factor is not the Court as all realists realize. It is the ground politics. Post Babri, a big change has occurred in Muslim mind, and their right to full empowerment in the affairs of their country, may result in different equation; say a decade or two from now.

Some optimists in Muslim folds, would like to cross the bridge, when they come to it. As long as Muslims consider India their own country, they will be prepared for all sacrifices to legitimize their rightful identity. If only Maulana could realize that this is not merely fight for Babri, it is a struggle to remain an Indian.


Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai


 ----------------------------------------------------------------------


TOP ARTICLE

Babri Masjid revisited

Maulana Wahiduddin Khan, Oct 12, 2010, 12.00am IST






The Babri masjid was built in 1528 at Ayodhya by Mir Baqi, the governor of Ayodhya at the time. He built it adjacent to the Ram chabutra, which is held sacred by the Hindus. This was a clear deviation from the Islamic principle. According to Islam, the places of worship of two religions should be built at a considerable distance from each other.

When Caliph Omar visited Jerusalem in AD 638, he wanted to offer his prayers. At that moment, he happened to be in the Church of the Resurrection of Jerusalem. The Christian bishop told him he could offer his prayers inside that very church. But the caliph refused. He said that he would offer his prayers at a stone's throw from the church. If he offered his prayers right there inside the church, it would create a controversy in the future. The Muslims of later generations would say that they would build a mosque there because their caliph had offered prayers there. Notwithstanding this historic example, Mir Baqi built a mosque adjoining a Hindu sacred place. This was bound to create problems.

In 1949, some Hindus placed three idols inside the Babri mosque. Unable to manage the crisis this created, the Muslims reacted: their failure to adopt the prophetic principle in this regard started an unending controversy between the two communities.

At the time of the Prophet, in the first quarter of the 7th century AD, idol worshippers had placed 360 idols in the premises of the Kabah, Mecca. But the Prophet never reacted. He simply ignored the situation and tried to change people's hearts. And the result was that, within 20 years, Meccans abandoned idol worship and became the followers of the Prophet. Then those Meccans themselves removed the idols from the Kabah without any confrontation or bloodshed.

In 1991, during the prime ministership of Narasimha Rao, the Indian Parliament passed a legislation called the Places of Worship Act, 1991. According to this Act, the government of India was bound to maintain the status quo of all places of worship on the Indian soil as it stood in 1947. But there was an exception that of the Babri masjid of Ayodhya. The Act maintained that the Babri masjid issue was in court, so the government would wait and it would be its duty to implement the verdict of the court when it was given.

This Act was a most reasonable one and Muslims should have accepted it as such. But they rejected it outright and resorted to street demonstrations. The demolition of the Babri masjid on December 6, 1992, was nothing but the culmination of this negative course of action adopted by the Muslims. At that time i said: "Babri Masjid ko Hinduon ne toda aur Musalmano ne usko tudwaya." (The Hindus demolished the Babri masjid but Muslims provoked them to do so.)

The Muslims subsequently took the very impractical line that the masjid should be rebuilt on the same spot. At that time, i said that the rebuilding formula was totally unrealistic; Muslims should accept the alternative formula of the relocation of the mosque.

It is a well-known fact that the relocation formula has been adopted by Arab countries. When these countries wanted to replan their cities, they found that there were many mosques that were obstacles to city planning. They did not hesitate to relocate such mosques. I said at the time that Muslims in India ought to adopt this same formula and accept the relocation of the Babri mosque. But again the Muslims refused.

Now, after the judicial verdict on September 30, 2010, the Muslims are generally saying that this verdict is contrary to their hopes and they will challenge it in the Supreme Court. But this is not going to solve the problem. It is an emotional reaction to the verdict and not a well-considered response.

Suppose the Muslims refer the issue to the Supreme Court and suppose it issues a judgement in their favour. Even then it will not solve the problem. The Muslims themselves set a precedent in 1985, which is enough to predict the situation as it will unfold.

In 1985, the Supreme Court issued a judgement in the Shah Bano case, which ran counter to Muslim aspirations. So the Muslims refused to accept the judgement. They took to the streets and the government was compelled to pass a new Act. The Hindus would certainly say that it was now their turn to refuse the verdict issued by the Supreme Court.

The only solution to this problem is for the Muslims to decide to put a full stop to this issue. If they put a comma, then there will be no end to it. We have lost 60 years by putting comma after comma and now this is the last chance to bring closure to the issue so that the relationship between the Hindus and the Muslims may be normalised. And this full stop means either leaving it to the government to implement the verdict or agreeing to the relocation of the Babri mosque. There is, in reality, no third option.

The writer is an Islamic scholar.

Monday, October 19, 2009

THE BALANCE OF POWER - EXCHANGES WITH BBC JOURNALISTS - By medialens.org


OCTOBER 19, 2009


THE BALANCE OF POWER - EXCHANGES WITH BBC JOURNALISTS - PARTS 1 & 2

 

In our previous alert ('The Westminster Conspiracy,' October 8) we described how the media's insistence that journalists be 'balanced', that they keep their personal opinions to themselves, is used as a tool of thought control. 

Journalists who criticise powerful interests can be attacked for their 'bias', for revealing their prejudices. On the other hand, as we will see in the examples below, almost no-one protests, or even notices, the lack of balance in patriotic articles reporting on the experience of British troops fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, on the credibility of British and American elections, or on claims that the West is spreading democracy across the Third World. Then, notions of patriotism, loyalty, the need to support 'our boys', make 'balance' seem disloyal, disrespectful; an indication, in fact, that a journalist is 'biased.' 

The media provide copious coverage of state-sponsored memorials commemorating the 50th, 60th, 65th anniversaries of D-Day, the Battle of Britain, the Battle of Arnhem, the retreat from
Dunkirk, the Battle of the Atlantic, the 25th anniversary of the Falklands War, and so on. Even the 200th anniversary of The Battle of Trafalgar was a major news item. Remembrance Sunday, Trooping The Colour, Beating The Retreat, the Fleet Review are all media fixtures. The military is of course happy to supply large numbers of troops and machines for these dramatic flypasts, parades and reviews. 

On
June 11, 2005, senior BBC news presenter, Huw Edwards, provided the commentary for Britain's Trooping The Colour military parade, describing it as "a great credit to the Irish Guards". Imagine if Edwards had added:
"While one can only be impressed by the discipline and skill on show in these parades, critics have of course warned against the promotion of patriotic militarism. The Russian novelist Tolstoy, for one, observed:

"'The ruling classes have in their hands the army, money, the schools, the churches and the press. In the schools they kindle patriotism in the children by means of histories describing their own people as the best of all peoples and always in the right. Among adults they kindle it by spectacles, jubilees, monuments, and by a lying patriotic press.'" (Tolstoy, Government is Violence - Essays on Anarchism and Pacifism, Phoenix Press, 1990, p.82)

Edwards would not have been applauded for providing this 'balance'. He would have been condemned far and wide as a crusading crackpot, and hauled before senior BBC management. 

When the Archbishop of Canterbury recently offered the mildest of criticisms of the invasion of
Iraq in a sermon in St Paul's Cathedral, the Sun newspaper responded: 'Archbishop of Canterbury's war rant mars troops tribute.' It added:
"The Archbishop of Canterbury yesterday hijacked a service honouring the sacrifice of British troops in Iraq - to spout an anti-war rant." (http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/
campaigns/our_boys/2675598/Archbishop-of-Canterburys-war-rant-mars-troops-tribute.html
)

The Archbishop's crime was heinous indeed, as the Sun explained:
"In an astonishing breach of convention, he then accused politicians of failing to think enough about the war's human cost.

"Speaking from the pulpit of
St Paul's, Dr Williams said: 

"'It would be a very rash person who would feel able to say without hesitation, this was absolutely the right or the wrong thing to do, the right or the wrong place to be. The conflict in
Iraq will, for a long time yet, exercise the historians, the moralists, the international experts. Reflecting on the years of the Iraq campaign, we cannot say that no mistakes were ever made.'"
We would be interested to see Williams' case for arguing  that invading Iraq might have been the +right+ thing to do. It could hardly be more obvious that invading was "the wrong thing to do" - it resulted in the virtual destruction of an entire country. It was also a monumental crime and not a mistake.

The Sun's article was archived under "news/campaigns/our_boys". As Tolstoy would have understood, the Sun is in fact a bitter class enemy of "our boys". It is a rich man's propaganda toy parading as a trusty pal of 'ordinary people'. We wrote to Williams on October 12:

Dear Rowan Williams

In your October 9 sermon at
St Paul's Cathedral, you spoke movingly of the cost paid in Iraq by British servicemen and women, and their families:

"Justice does not come without cost. In the most obvious sense, it is the cost of life and safety. For very many here today, that will be the first thing in their minds and hearts - along with the cost in anxiety and compassion that is carried by the families of servicemen and women." (http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/
-belief/2009/oct/09/rowan-williams-iraq-war-sermon)

But you made no mention of Iraqi civilian or military suffering. According to an October 2006 report published in the Lancet medical journal, the US-UK invasion had by then caused some 655,000 excess deaths. In February 2007, Les Roberts, co-author of the report, argued that
Britain and America might have triggered in Iraq "an episode more deadly than the Rwandan genocide", in which 800,000 people were killed. (Roberts, 'Iraq's death toll is far worse than our leaders admit,' The Independent, February 14, 2007;http://comment.independent.co.uk/-
commentators/article2268067.ece) 

Later that year, the BBC reported:

"More than a million Iraqis have been killed since the invasion in 2003, according to the British polling company ORB." (Newsnight, BBC2,
September 14, 2007)

Why did you make no mention of these death tolls and of the truly awesome suffering of the Iraqi population?

Best wishes

David

We have received no reply.

My Pal Stan - Justin Webb And The General (And The Guidelines)

On October 7, the BBC published new draft editorial guidelines. It is worth paying close attention to section 4.4.13:
"Presenters, reporters and correspondents are the public face and voice of the BBC - they can have a significant impact on perceptions of our impartiality. Journalists and presenters, including those in news and current affairs, may provide professional judgements, rooted in evidence, but may not express personal views on public policy, on matters of political or industrial controversy, or on 'controversial subjects' in any other area. 

"Our audiences should not be able to tell from BBC programmes or other BBC output the personal prejudices of our journalists and presenters on such matters. This applies as much to online content as it does to news bulletins: nothing should be written by journalists and presenters that would not be said on air." (http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctrust/assets/files/pdf/our_
work/editorial_guidelines/draft_ed_guidelines.txt
)

The Guardian noted that some industry observers are already referring to the last phrase as the "Jeremy Bowen clause". In April, the BBC Trust partly upheld complaints over accuracy and impartiality made against Bowen, the BBC's Middle East editor. 
(http://www.editorsweblog.org/multimedia/2009/10
/bbcs_new_editorial_guidelines_tightening.php
)

Bowen was censured for a piece he wrote for the BBC website in June 2008 on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He referred to "Zionism's innate instinct to push out the frontier". He wrote that
Israel showed a "defiance of everyone's interpretation of international law except its own" and that its generals felt that they were dealing with "unfinished business", left over from 1948. ('Bowen "breached rules on impartiality,"' The Independent, April 16, 2009;
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/
bowen-breached-rules-on-impartiality-1669278.html
)

A BBC committee ruled that Bowen's reporting had partially breached the BBC's rules on accuracy and impartiality. In reality, he was stating indisputable facts. Bowen was criticised for his "loose phrasing", but the point we are making is that, if Bowen had made comparable comments about official enemies like Iran, Syria, Venezuela and North Korea, no BBC executive would have given a thought to any lack of balance. Such reports continuously pass completely unnoticed. The truth is that media balance is a function of power. Indeed it might properly be termed the balance of power. 

In the October 4 edition of the Mail on Sunday, Justin Webb, presenter of the BBC's Today programme, wrote about the commander of US forces in
Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, in an article titled:
'Why my pal Stan has a terrorist's false arm on his wall.'
To be clear, the title described the US commander waging this controversial and bloody war as Webb's "pal". Just this single sentence clearly contravenes the BBC's guidelines on balance. And notice that it is inconceivable that a BBC journalist could pen an article with the title:
'Why my pal Osama has a US soldier's false arm on his wall.'
Webb explained the arm on the wall:
"The severed arm, I should say, is sticking out of the kind of ornate frame you might choose for a watercolour. The arm looks real but is actually a prosthetic limb. On closer inspection the oddity is compounded: the hand is clutching a mobile phone. 

"The General enters the room and provides the explanation. 

"'The guys were fooling around,' he says. 'We went out to kill a sheik who had only one arm and we ended up getting the false arm but nothing else.' 

"'That's not it,' the General adds, with a slight hint of wistfulness. 'They just mocked that up for the joke. The phone was what gave his position away.'" 
(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1217843/Why-Americas-new-commander-Afghanistan-terrorists-arm-wall-Justin-Webb.html - the online title has been altered from the print original)

We wrote to Webb on October 13:
Dear Justin Webb

Doesn't the title of your recent article in the Mail on Sunday (
October 4, 2009) contravene [the latest draft BBC editorial] guidelines:

'Why my pal Stan has a terrorist's false arm on his wall'?

You wrote of the
US commander in Afghanistan:

"Stanley McChrystal is a character. In some respects he straight is out of central casting: big, with fierce eyes and weather-beaten skin. He looks every bit as fit as a
Hollywood version of a special forces soldier. Yet he eats only one meal a day."

You even joked about the collecting of trophies from Afghan war dead:

"One-armed Taliban fighters should still be wary, though. When Stanley McChrystal comes home, he'll want something for the other walls."

You made reference to allegations of torture by American forces serving under McChrystal in
Iraq, but there was no mention of the serious legal and human rights concerns surrounding Nato's war in Afghanistan. Wasn't this article in fact profoundly biased in favour of Nato's war?

Sincerely

David

Webb also referred in passing to a particularly gruesome Nato attack:
"When German troops in Afghanistan called in an air attack on stolen oil-filled tankers last month, killing a number of civilians in the process, McChrystal had trouble raising some of his European colleagues on the phone."
Presumably the number of civilians burned alive was unworthy of mention. Al Jazeera reported:
"Thirty Afghan civilians were among nearly 100 people killed after Nato aircraft destroyed two stolen oil tankers in the north of the country earlier this month, an Afghan government investigation has concluded."
(http://english.aljazeera.net/news/ asia/2009/09/2009913142828949326.html)

Webb replied on October 13:
David hello -- and yes the title was unfortunate I agree. The entire piece was approved by the BBC but the sub editors then came up with that introduction. Having said that I certainly don't agree that the piece supported any war or any individual -- merely pointed out that he is a character, which he is. I expressed no personal view on the Afghan conflict, nor could you guess from the piece what my personal view is! 

best jw

It says everything that the piece was approved by the BBC, which presumably perceived no lack of balance. Again, Tolstoy offered an example of the kind of thinking that is far beyond the pale for BBC journalism:
"Above all, they inflame patriotism in this way: perpetrating every kind of injustice and harshness against other nations, they provoke in them enmity towards their own people, and then in turn exploit that enmity to embitter their people against the foreigner." (Tolstoy, ibid., p.82)
Comments that offer a penetrating insight into the disaster that is US-UK strategy in Afghanistan, both past and present.

MEDIA LENS: Correcting for the distorted vision of the corporate media


October 19, 2009


MEDIA ALERT: THE BALANCE OF POWER - EXCHANGES WITH BBC JOURNALISTS - PART 2



A Gale Of Spring Air - Barbara Plett And The President

On September 24, we wrote to the BBC’s Barbara Plett:

Dear Barbara Plett

It's hard to believe your article, 'Debuts and diatribes at the UN', was written by a member of an ostensibly free press. You write of Obama: 

"New
US President Barack Obama set the stage with a sweeping speech announcing America's re-engagement with the UN. Coming after the winter years of the Bush administration, this was a gale of spring air." (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8272081.stm)

By contrast, the "quixotic colonel", Gaddafi, "embarked on a diatribe that rambled on for an hour-and-a-half."

As for our own Dear Leader:

"After the Libyan leader finally sat down, an indignant Mr Brown changed his speech to defend the founding principles of the UN." 

Jolly good show! And the Iranian president:

"Mr Ahmadinejad himself didn't mention Iran's nuclear programme in front of the assembly, nor did he seem distracted by walkouts to protest his denials of the Nazi Holocaust, and what many see as his fraudulent re-election. In typical style he lambasted
Israel and the West for double standards, failed ideologies and imperial interventions."

This reads like a spoof of Big Brother-style thought control. Through an unsubtle mix of swoons and snarls we're told who are the 'good guys' and who the 'bad guys'. The BBC insists its journalism is carefully balanced with all personal opinions omitted - but this is not journalism, it is propaganda.

Sincerely

David Edwards


Plett replied on October 6: 

Dear Mr Edwards 

Apologies for the lateness of my response, I started to reply last week but have been distracted by demands on both work and domestic fronts. 
With regards to your comments that my article amounted to unsubtle propaganda that delineated the “good guys” and the “bad guys:”

In essence, I was writing about what three world leaders had to say on the opening day of the General Assembly, how they presented themselves on the world stage, and how they were received. I was not suggesting that any of them delivered the objective truth, the piece was meant to convey what was said from the point of view of the speaker. Given your complaint, I can see it might have been helpful to signpost more clearly.

But to clarify: 

Gaddafi made some points that resonated with the audience, but his presentation was rambling and often incoherent. It was received with a mixture of curiosity and irritation, tending towards the latter as his speech wound on Ahmadinejad’s objective was to criticise the west of double standards (on nuclear issues), failed ideologies (capitalism and corruption) and imperial intervention (invasion & occupation of Iraq/Afghanistan). That was the main thrust of his speech to the General Assembly

Obama’s objective was to announce that
America was re-engaging with the UN. I think it is fair to say the General Assembly broadly welcomed that. That’s what I meant by a gale of spring air: there was a palpable sends of relief to have a US president prepared to work through rather than against the UN. For sure this will be in pursuit of national foreign policy objectives, but that is the same for all members. 

A final comment on “good guys” and “bad guys:” It is a fair point that stains on the US record (ie launching what the UN regarded as an illegal war in Iraq, Abu Ghraib etc) should also be mentioned if one is to accuse Gaddafi of oppressing the opposition and Ahmadinejad of fraudulent elections. The qualification I would make is that Ahmadinejad and Gaddafi were personally implicated in abuses against their own people, whereas Obama was not present at the time of the
Iraq invasion and has campaigned for a US withdrawal. Also as I mentioned earlier, the piece was about personalities, not about states or state policies. 

Best regards, 
Barbara Plett


We replied on October 19:

Dear Barbara

Many thanks for such a lengthy and thoughtful response; it’s much appreciated. You write:

“In essence, I was writing about what three world leaders had to say on the opening day of the General Assembly, how they presented themselves on the world stage, and how they were received.”

You claim you were writing about how the three world leaders “were received”. But you wrote that Obama’s words were “a gale of spring air”, full stop. You +then+ added that Obama had been given “a warm reception” by UN members. The first comment expressed your own opinion - it was the kind of impassioned, personal endorsement of Obama that is continually being made by mainstream journalists. Likewise, you wrote that Gaddafi “rambled on”. You did not write that UN members +felt+ that Gadaffi had rambled on. You then focused on the Iranian leader’s alleged sins and noted that he “lambasted
Israel” in “typical style” - again, your personal, derogatory assessment.

You write further:

“It is a fair point that stains on the US record (ie launching what the UN regarded as an illegal war in Iraq, Abu Ghraib etc) should also be mentioned if one is to accuse Gaddafi of oppressing the opposition and Ahmadinejad of fraudulent elections. The qualification I would make is that Ahmadinejad and Gaddafi were personally implicated in abuses against their own people, whereas Obama was not present at the time of the
Iraq invasion and has campaigned for a US withdrawal.”

You say that Obama has “campaigned” for a
US withdrawal. But he is the president of the United States. He is the commander-in-chief of the occupying force. He doesn’t need to campaign; he has the power to order an immediate withdrawal. He is therefore directly accountable for maintaining an illegal occupation that since 2003 has resulted in the deaths of more than one million people. Worth mentioning, one would think, but such a comment is inconceivable in a BBC report.

Obama has escalated wars from south
Asia to the Horn of Africa. In July, John Pilger reported in the New Statesman that since Obama had taken office US drones had killed 700 civilians in Pakistan (http://www.johnpilger.com/page.asp?partid=545). A month earlier, in a report submitted to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, UN Special Investigator Philip Alston called the United States' reliance on pilotless missile-carrying aircraft "increasingly common" and "deeply troubling."
(http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/06/04/drone.attacks/)

In July, one of
Britain's most senior judges, Lord Bingham, said that drone attacks were so "cruel as to be beyond the pale of human tolerance". (http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/top-judge-use-of-drones-intolerable-1732756.html)

US drone attacks on Pakistan are almost certainly illegal under international law. Under Article 51 of the UN Charter, the US is entitled to self-defence only when it preserves “the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a member of the United Nations” (http://www.un.org/en/documents/charter/chapter7.shtml). Pakistan is clearly not engaged in an attack on the United States. 

You could have mentioned some or all of these issues (and many others) in balancing your comments on Ahmadinejad’s “denials of the Nazi Holocaust, and what many see as his fraudulent re-election”. Instead, we were left with the standard BBC depiction of a world divided up between the ‘good guys’ and the ‘bad guys’, between 'us' and 'them'. This kind of propaganda has terrible consequences in yet again preparing the public mind for bloodshed.

Best wishes

David


The Limits Of Influence - Jeremy Bowen And The Superpower

The BBC’s
Middle East correspondent, Jeremy Bowen, similarly practices a version of ‘balanced’ reporting that betrays the truth of the murderously unbalanced Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We wrote to Bowen on September 24:

Dear Jeremy

You write:

"Mr Netanyahu's refusal to do as he was asked has been an embarrassing, even humiliating reminder of the limits of America's influence over Israel, a close ally which receives billions of dollars of US military aid and lashings of political support." (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/8271715.stm)

The reality, as even your comment must lead us to conclude, is very different - the 'failure' was a humiliating reminder of the limits of peace activists' influence over an American political class that bankrolls and arms the Israeli aggressor. The idea that
America is a neutral peacemaker in this war of conquest, wringing its hands in frustration, is a lie. Norman Finkelstein made the point:

"But who gave the green light for
Israel to commit the massacres? Who supplied the F-16s and Apache helicopters to Israel? Who vetoed the Security Council resolutions calling for international monitors to supervise the reduction of violence?...

"Consider this scenario. A and B stand accused of murder. The evidence shows that A provided B with the murder weapon, A gave B the "all-clear" signal, and A prevented onlookers from answering the victim's screams. Would the verdict be that A was insufficiently engaged or that A was every bit as guilty as B of murder?"

Best

David

Bowen replied the same day:

Interesting argument - except that the individual most humiliated by
Israel's refusal was the man at the summit of the political class, the President hinself.

Yes, the
Gaza war was greenlighted by his predecessor. You'll remember Israel ended its main operation just as he took office. Had Mr Bush still been in office the issue of a freeze would not have arisen.

What has changed is the definition of what's in the interests of the
US.

I don't think I suggested the
US was a neutral peacemaker. It's simply Pres Obama defines his country's interests differently to Pres Bush, by identifying a peace settlement as a US national priority. Otherwise he wouldn't need to bother doing what he's doing.

Thanks for writing

Yours

Jeremy Bowen
BBC Middle East Editor

We wrote again on the same day:

Dear Jeremy

Thanks. On the
Gaza attack, the US was a participant throughout - that's been the norm since 1967. As for the "embarrassing" reminder, why on earth should Netanyahu agree to ending settlement growth (in accord with Israel's commitment in the Road Map) after Obama has stated clearly that there won't even be a slap on the wrist - he won't go as far as Bush I - if Israel continues to build?

On
Gaza again, you're missing the point. Bush gave the green light. Obama agreed. That's why he said not one word about it, claiming that there was only one President (which didn't stop him from commenting on many other issues). As Israeli sources make clear, the Gaza operation was very carefully planned throughout. It was planned to end just as Obama came into office, as a favour to him, so that he could continue to fail to say a word about the US-backed crime. Which is what happened.

On settlement growth, Obama is just repeating what Bush II said (and what's in the Road Map that Bush II signed) - and, importantly, he's not even going as far as Bush I. That aside, the issue of settlement growth is hardly more than a device to obscure real issues - namely, the settlements themselves are all illegal, all constructed by the US-Israel in ways that undermine any realistic hope for Palestinian self-determination. 

Best

David


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