BBC correspondent Orla Guerin has long
been criticized for her anti-Israel line of
reporting. One telling episode:
When a would-be teenage Palestinian suicide bomber was apprehended at an IDF
checkpoint in March 2004, Guerin's BBC TV dispatch stressed neither the mortal
threat that had been thwarted, nor the ongoing terrorist abuse of children,
but rather dismissed the event as an Israeli PR stunt ― 'a
picture that Israel wants the world to see.' Following this Guerin
report, Minister
Natan Sharansky sent an official letter of complaint to the BBC, slamming
Guerin's 'gross double standard to the Jewish State.'
So it came as a
shock to media monitors when Guerin was recently honored with a
special
citation from the British government (via the Queen of England) for 'outstanding service to
broadcasting.' One Israeli
government official said
awarding Guerin in this manner fits into a pattern that began in 2003 when the
UK's Political Cartoon Society
awarded its
Cartoon of the Year to a depiction of Ariel Sharon biting the head off
the bloodied head of a Palestinian child.
GUERIN'S LACK OF CONTIGUITY
A recent Guerin report on development in eastern Jerusalem provides
both
an opportunity to see her bias in action, and to debunk one of the
most widespread myths currently disseminated in media coverage of the region
― the claim that Israel is unilaterally
eliminating the contiguity of a future West Bank Palestinian state.
Guerin's April 28
BBC radio report addressed the proposed plan for future building in the Jerusalem
suburb of Maale Adumim, a plan called 'E-1'.
(Here is
a NY
Times map
of the proposed development project, including one proposed route for the security
fence enclosing it.)
Guerin's report is built around the statements of Jeff Halper, whom Guerin
presents as a neutral party ― in her words,
Halper is 'an impassioned defender of human rights, and a
critic of his own government's policies.' But as
NGO Monitor notes, Halper is actually a well-known radical who 'routinely
uses terms such as "apartheid" and "war crimes" to refer to Israeli policy
against Palestinian terror, supports a "one state solution", and advocates
sanctions and boycotts.'
In Guerin's report, Halper
traces the outline of the planned expansion of
Ma'aleh Adumim on a map, showing how it will close off East
Jerusalem and split the West Bank in two, north and south.
"I do not believe there is any way back to a
viable two-state solution," he says. Looking at the lines on the map, it is hard to
argue.
Actually, it's very easy to argue, since Halper's
claim is manifestly untrue: Even if Maale Adumim were to be extended
to its full municipal boundaries, an open channel of land would remain
between northern and southern sections of the West Bank.
That channel of land would at its narrowest be 9
miles (15 km) ― the
same sized 'waistline' that Israel has lived with in its central
region for over 50 years. Traffic could easily flow through this region, so
by no means would this development, as Guerin claims, 'split the West
Bank in two, north and south.' CAMERA published a helpful map that illustrates this point.
This 'contiguity distortion' has appeared in many other recent
media reports as well. For example, the Philadelphia Inquirer (4/13)
claimed the proposed Maale Adumim development would 'cut the West Bank in
half,' and syndicated columnist Georgie Anne Geyer falsely asserted (4/19)
that 'Ramallah and Jericho... has no land connection with the
southern section that includes Bethlehem and Hebron.'
ACTION ITEMS
1) Write to the BBC's 'Correspondent' program to request a
correction of Orla Guerin's 4/28 report that claimed Maale Adumim
development would 'split the West Bank in two':
Click here to use the online form.
2) Be on the lookout in your local media for false claims
that development of a Jerusalem suburb would 'split the West Bank in
two', or otherwise deny Palestinians territorial contiguity in a
potential future state.
Thank you for your ongoing involvement in the battle against media bias.
HonestReporting