A new, comprehensive poll of British opinion on foreign nations was
just released by The Telegraph. The
results: Israel is considered by Britons the #1 'least
deserving of international respect,' the 'least beautiful country,' the
country Britons would 'least like to take a holiday in,' and would 'least like to
live in.'
How did this British animosity toward Israel come about,
with Israel ranked worse than Egypt, India, China and 20 other countries?
Today's (Jan. 5) UK media coverage of an incident in Gaza goes a long way toward explaining it.
The
Guardian announced a horrific IDF act of child killing:
seven children on their way
to pick strawberries were mistaken for Palestinian militants
and killed by Israeli tank shells... The tanks used
anti-personnel shells, which throw out thousands of metal darts in a
deadly cloud... The attack took place near Beit Lahiya, in
northern Gaza, from where militants had been firing mortars at
Israeli positions on the Gaza border...
The Guardian report 1) presents as
established fact a 'mistaken killing' of innocent Palestinian
children, 2) reverses the actual series of events ― IDF response named
first, Palestinian mortars second, 3) describes the Israeli civilian
target of the Palestinian mortar fire as an Israeli 'position' ―
falsely implying a military target, and 4) calls the IDF
response an 'attack,' while the Palestinian mortar fire (against
civilians) receives no such derogatory description.
Here's what actually happened, according to an altogether
fair report from
The New York Times:
The troubles began when Palestinians fired four mortar
rounds in the morning, wounding an Israeli civilian in an industrial zone on
the northern edge of the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military said. One shell
nearly hit a school bus carrying children in northern Gaza, the military
added.
Soon afterward, an Israeli tank fired on a group of Palestinians believed to
have been responsible for firing the mortars from farmland on the outskirts of
Beit Lahiya, the Israeli military said. Seven Palestinian youths
working in a strawberry field, ages 11 to 17, were killed, according to
relatives, witnesses and Palestinian officials at Kamal Adwan Hospital...
Col. Avi Levy, a brigade commander in northern Gaza, told Israel radio that
"we understand that the fire actually hit that cell [of Palestinian
terrorists]." But he acknowledged the possibility of civilian casualties. "In
the event that our fire hit civilians, then this is the place to protest
against terrorists who fire mortars from the midst of civilians."
Note that the Times account acknowledges 1) who started the violence ― Palestinians targeting Israeli civilians, 2) the IDF claim
that its tanks actually struck the mortar-firing terrorists, and
3) the all-important issue of terrorists firing mortars from
the midst of Palestinian civilians, thereby endangering innocents'
lives.
Now we understand the results of the UK public opinion poll.
Years of reports such as today's from the Guardian have
left Britons with a highly distorted understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.HonestReporting asks: How much longer will an irresponsible UK media continue to
deceive the British public by blaming Israel for all the region's woes?
Comments to the Guardian:
letters@guardian.co.uk
WINTER BREAK IN ISRAEL
The college campus has become a threatening place for
pro-Israel students. A well-organized campaign against Israel ―
including mock checkpoints and 'apartheid walls', rowdy anti-Israel demonstrations,
and anti-Israel lecturers ― has turned many North American campuses into
centers of hateful propaganda.
HonestReporting recognized that the college newspaper was an important
element of this anti-Israel campaign (for example, the
U of Illinois
paper recently
called Israel a 'base for genocide'), so we launched
HonestReporting for
Campus to empower students to fight back.
Right now, while many of their fellow students are sunbathing in
Florida during winter break, 170 HR-Campus activists are in Israel for a 2-week
training program operated though our affiliate,
Hasbara Fellowships.
This is the biggest program of its kind ever.
The program features workshops that train students how to deal with anti-Israel
propaganda on campus, educates students about current issues and the history of Israel and
the Mideast, and provides tools for effectively communicating this information in college papers and on campus.
Some highlights of the current training program include tours of Israel's security fence, meetings with victims of terror,
Mideast history seminars, and briefing sessions with former Israeli Ambassador to the
United Nations Dore Gold, and Raanan Gissin, a top advisor to Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon.
Program Director Patrick Amar says: 'I'm proud of how these bright Jewish students from
North America are willing to take a stand, becoming advocates on behalf of
Israel. These young
adults are sure to become the pro-Israel leaders of tomorrow.'
For more information on HonestReporting for Campus,
click here ― and be
sure to sign up for HR-Campus communiques as well.
Thank you for your ongoing involvement in the battle against media
bias.
HonestReporting