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Aït Ayt
25-01-09, 12:51
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/images/2009/01/420201.jpg

Demo at Broadcasting House Calls for BBC to Broadcast Gaza Appeal

Around 10,000 people attended a demonstration at the BBC building in central London on Saturday 24 Jan, 2009, in protest against the continuing siege of Gaza and to show their contempt at the partisan decision by the BBC not to broadcast the emergency appeal for Gaza. Protesters marched from a rally there to Trafalgar Square. Pictures Copyright (C) 2009 Peter Marshall, all rights reserved.

I woke this morning to hear Tony Benn being interviewed on Radio 4 about the BBC decision not to broadcast the Disasters Emergency Committee emergency appeal for humanitarian aid for Gaza. Taken on the spurious grounds of 'impartiality', it is a decision that is clearly partisan, placing the Corporation firmly on the side of the government of Israel and their sick fiction that there is no humanitarian crisis there.

I was delighted to be able to congratulate him on this performance in person as he sat outside Broadcasting House. In the interview he gave the details of the DEC appeal on air (see below), and he told me he had repeated this in BBC TV News interview. He also told me that the whole Today programme studio had been on his side, against the decision taken by the BBC hierarchy.

If you missed his contribution you can hear it again on the BBC web site at http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_7848000/7848670.stm where he told people they could write cheques to the 'Disaster Emergency committee Gaza Crisis' and send it to PO Box 999, London EC3A 3AA, or go to any Post Office quoting Freepay Number 1210. You can also go to the DEC web site http://www.dec.org.uk/

Later the programme broadcast Caroline Thomson, one of the BBC bosses, attempting to justify the decision. Frankly what she said was appalling and my immediate response was to log on to my computer and send my complaint to the BBC ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/). You can hear her on the Today site, as well as International Development Secretary Douglas Alexander who has also asked the BBC to think again.

After a short press conference outside Broadcasting House, Tony Benn led others into the BBC building to deliver a letter of protest. Around 20 people entered and then a policeman stood in front of me and prevented me from following them. But they soon came out and moved up the road to where the rally was to take place. Police pushed a number of demonstrators who wanted to continue to demonstrate outside the BBC across the road away from the building, and tempers got a little raised, but there was no real violence.

Speaker after speaker denounced the BBC decision and called on them to change their mind, and there was considerable cheering when it was announced that other broadcasters had decided to run the appeal. Benn in his speech forecast that the pressure on the BBC which was coming from all sections of the community would soon force them to change their mind.

The demonstration had been planned long before the DEC appeal became an issue, and the starting point at Broadcasting House was chosen to draw attention to the lack of honest and unbiased coverage of the Israeli attack on Gaza by the BBC. This was not the fault of the many journalists who - in so far as the Israeli press ban had allowed - had worked as well as they could, but an institutional bias, in part resulting from the same kind of misapplication of the idea of impartiality that led them to the ridiculous decision over the DEC appeal. The demonstrations main aims, also reflected in the speeches at the rally were to call for an end to the blockade of Gaza, for a stop on arms sales to Israel and for the Israeli war criminals to be brought to justice.

The rally overran and the march proceeded to Trafalgar Square directly rather than as had originally been planned going past Downing Street, and shoes were thrown on the road outside the BBC rather than there. A few people were arrested for obstructing the police as the march reached Piccadilly Circus, and stewards halted the march, apparently demanding that those arrested should be released before they went on. But after around ten minutes the march moved on anyway to a final rally at Trafalgar Square. As this got under way I left, walking past many police vans parked around the square and in Whitehall. There had been a very strong police presence throughout.

At home I read the Press Association report of the demonstration. Ridiculously it stated there had been 400 demonstrators at the BBC, and I think this was the figure used in the BBC news I heard at 6pm. On their web site the BBC now says 2,000. The report on Sky quotes a police estimate of 5,000 - which would normally mean there were 10,000 on the march.

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/01/420193.html

mark61
25-01-09, 13:16
:duim:

Je moet ze wel nageven dat ze er zelf over berichten (6 artikelen tot nog toe) en mensen op hun site laten discussiëren.

BBC resisting pressure over Gaza

The DEC appeal is due to be broadcast for the first time on Monday
The BBC is continuing to resist pressure over its decision not to air an appeal for aid to Gaza, as the Archbishop of York joined its critics.

Rival channels ITV, Channel 4 and Five have now agreed to show the DEC appeal.

Director general Mark Thompson has said by airing the appeal the BBC would risk reducing public confidence in its impartial coverage of the conflict.

But Dr John Sentamu said it was "not a row about impartiality but rather about humanity".

In a statement, he said: "This situation is akin to that of British military hospitals who treat prisoners of war as a result of their duty under the Geneva convention.

"They do so because they identify need rather than cause.

"This is not an appeal by Hamas asking for arms but by the Disasters Emergency Committee asking for relief. By declining their request, the BBC has already taken sides and forsaken impartiality." Disasters Emergency Committee Gaza humanitarian appeal:
Launched by UK charities on 22 January to raise money for Gaza aid relief and reconstruction
Participants: Action Aid, British Red Cross, Cafod, Care International, Christian Aid, Concern Worldwide, Help the Aged, Islamic Relief, Merlin, Oxfam, Save the Children, Tearfund, World Vision
Information on 0370 60 60 900 or at DEC website


Reaction to the BBC's appeal veto
Mark Thompson on Gaza appeal
Send us your comments

BBC Trust chairman Michael Lyons has voiced concerns over political interference in the BBC's editorial independence, after a number of politicians publicly criticised the move.

The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) appeal will be screened for the first time on Monday.

In a blog message on the BBC website explaining the decision, Mark Thompson said: "Inevitably an appeal would use pictures which are the same or similar to those we would be using in our news programmes but would do so with the objective of encouraging public donations.

"The danger for the BBC is that this could be interpreted as taking a political stance on an ongoing story."

Rally arrests

He stressed the corporation would "continue to cover the human side of the conflict in Gaza extensively across our news services where we can place all of the issues in context in an objective and balanced way".

He also cited another reason for the decision as "concern about whether aid raised by the appeal could actually be delivered on the ground".

We can't ignore suffering in the interests of what the BBC call impartiality

Tony Benn

Andrew Hind, chief executive of the Charity Commission, which regulates UK-registered charities, said all the leading agencies in the DEC have said they can deliver.

"That is not an issue for them," he said. "Oxfam, Save the Children, Islamic Relief are 100% confident they can convert aid and donations from the public into meaningful help to all those people in desperate need."

He urged the BBC to reconsider and said the work of the agencies would be hampered if they did not receive "maximum public support".

Earlier on Saturday, police said at least 2,000 protesters gathered outside the BBC's Broadcasting House in central London before handing in a petition to the corporation.

There were seven arrests at the rally.


HAVE YOUR SAY It is a political appeal because it's focused on one side in this war, and will be used for political purposes.
Michael, Brentwood
Send us your commentsEarlier, ITV and Sky had been in agreement with the BBC that they would not air the appeal. But ITV later reversed its decision.

Sky says it is still considering the Disasters Emergency Committee's request.

The DEC - an umbrella organisation for several major aid charities - wants to raise funds for people in need of food, shelter and medicines as a result of Israel's military action in the Gaza Strip.

Previous DEC appeals shown on multiple TV and radio channels have raised millions of pounds for victims of wars and natural disasters.

'Humanitarian needs'

International Development Secretary Douglas Alexander said the British public could "distinguish between support for humanitarian aid and perceived partiality in a conflict".

"I really struggle to see in the face of the immense human suffering of people in Gaza... that this is in any way a credible argument," he added.


BBC's chief operating officer Caroline Thomson defends the veto
Shadow international development secretary Andrew Mitchell said it was "clearly a decision for the BBC and other broadcasters " whether they showed the appeal.

Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said it was an "insult" to the viewing public to suggest they could not distinguish between humanitarian needs and political sensitivities.

Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr show, he said: "To suggest the BBC should somehow not allow people to show their compassion... because of the wider controversies in the Middle East, is a case of the BBC totally getting its priorities upside down."

In a letter to the BBC director general on Saturday, BBC Trust chairman Michael Lyons expressed concern that the "level and tone" of some of the political comment was "coming close to constituting undue interference in the editorial independence of the BBC".

He assured Mr Thompson the Trust would "do everything in our power to ensure that you are given the space to make the editorial decisions you feel, after due consideration, are right in the circumstances".

BBC political correspondent Gary O'Donoghue said the corporation was facing "quite a lot of pressure", but its position had been shored up "a little bit" by the Trust's move.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7849616.stm

mark61
25-01-09, 13:17
Discussie: http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?forumID=5959&edition=2&ttl=20090125131505

mark61
25-01-09, 13:20
Added: Saturday, 24 January, 2009, 22:31 GMT 22:31 UK

1300 massacred.

7000+ Injured.

10,000s Homeless.

100,000s without water, power, basic supplies.

This isn't about taking sides, it's about helping people in need. Stop worshipping Israel and show the appeal.

james nobody, weymouth, United Kingdom

Recommended by 300 people

Dat is veel op die site.