Press Release on Key BBC Ruling Against Mideast Editor Jeremy Bowen

In a significant ruling, the BBC’s highest body has substantially upheld CAMERA’s complaint that BBC News’s Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen violated the broadcaster’s guidelines that require impartiality and accuracy. Below is CAMERA’s press release on the breaking development.

CAMERA has also posted on its Web site a detailed overview describing the complaint and the BBC’s often-disturbingly misleading early attempts to defend its biased report. That piece can be found here.
The press release follows. (UPDATE: An earlier version of this press release mistakenly referred to the ruling as a March 31 decision. In fact, the BBC Trust reached its decision on March 3, and publicized it on April 15.)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

BBC Trust Rules Against Mideast Editor Jeremy Bowen

Boston, MA – The BBC has determined that its Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen, had violated the broadcaster’s ethical guidelines calling for impartiality and accuracy. The finding is likely to amplify concerns that BBC news coverage of the Arab-Israeli conflict is largely biased against Israel.

The March 3, 2009 decision by the Editorial Standards Committee (ESC), a unit of the BBC’s top decision-making body, the BBC Trust, comes in response to a formal complaint filed by the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA), and a similar complaint filed independently by a member of the U.K.-based Zionist Federation.

CAMERA’s complaint charged that Bowen’s June 4, 2007 article about the Six-Day War and its aftermath was marred by “serious omissions, exaggerations and outright anti-Israel bias.” The detailed complaint came before the ESC after the BBC News Web site and Editorial Complaints Unit defended Bowen’s article.

In response to the ruling, CAMERA Senior Research Analyst Gilead Ini said that while ESC’s willingness to openly fault unethical reporting by Bowen is important and encouraging, it is unclear that the BBC will draw appropriate conclusions from its findings and take concrete steps to combat the broadcaster’s chronically biased reporting. “Acknowledging the glaring problems in this article is a good first step, but it’s only a first step,” he said. “The BBC also needs to consider the wider implications here. Not only did the senior BBC reporter in the Middle East show bias in his reporting, but he also made it clear, while defending his piece before the ESC, that he thinks it’s reasonable to report from the Palestinian perspective and ignore other mainstream narratives.”

Ini feels that the ESC findings and, especially, Bowen’s “outrageously deceptive” attempts to defend his report, explain the journalist’s past biased coverage and cast doubt on his suitability as a BBC reporter and editor. “There’s good reason to be skeptical of Mr. Bowen’s reporting,” he said, “and by extension, the reporting of BBC reporters who are subordinate to him.”

CAMERA is concerned that the ESC, despite having ruled that Bowen’s reporting was not impartial, is apparently not calling on the reporter to be objective in future articles. Its ruling states that it is not necessary for Bowen to have given equal space to different views. “All that was required was a clear statement signposting that there were alternative theses subscribed to by respectable historians.”

This assertion is inconsistent with the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines, Ini argues. “If Jeremy Bowen consistently promotes only one point of view linked to a controversial subject and fails to relay in any real depth other prominent and reasonable views, the result is biased reporting,” he said. “This is true regardless of whether or not Bowen throws in a sentence ‘signposting’ that other views exist.”

The ESC finding that “the article had breached the guideline on impartiality” came after an independent advisor commissioned by the BBC described Bowen’s assessment of the Six-Day War as being “firmly of the ‘New Historian’ kind,” and “unqualified by an acknowledgment that the opposite or ‘mainstream’ opinion might have some weight too.”

The advisor had also consulted with mainstream historian Martin Gilbert and revisionist historian Avi Shlaim, who both agreed that aspects of Bowen’s piece were not accurate.

CAMERA will soon be posting on its website key excerpts from the complaint and the BBC rulings.

###

CAMERA (the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America), a national non-profit media-monitoring organization headquartered in Boston, works to promote accurate, balanced and complete coverage of Israel and the Middle East. A non-partisan 501(c)3 organization, CAMERA takes no position with regard to American or Israeli political issues or with regard to ultimate solutions to the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Comments are closed.