July 10, 2006
Traditionally, British media reporting of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been heavily biased in favour of the
United States' major ally in the region, Israel. A 2002 Glasgow
University Media Group report found that television broadcasters were
six times as likely to present Israeli attacks as "retaliating" or in
some way hitting back as Palestinian attacks. This caused many viewers
to believe that the Palestinians were to blame for the conflict. (Greg
Philo and Mike Berry, 'Bad News from Israel'; http://www.gla.ac.uk/departments/ sociology/units/media/israel.htm)
Reporting
of the June 25 capture of an Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, by
Palestinian militants at an army post at Kerem Shalom near Gaza
demonstrated the same bias. The BBC, ITV News, the Guardian,
Independent and most other media described the incident as a
"kidnapping". We emailed Guardian journalist David Fickling:
"In today's article, 'Israel detains Hamas ministers,' you write:
"'Israeli
troops arrested dozens of Hamas ministers and parliamentarians today as
they stepped up their campaign to free a soldier kidnapped by militants
in Gaza at the weekend.' (http://www.guardian.co.uk/ israel/Story/0,,1808570,00.html)
"Why do Israeli militants 'detain' and 'arrest', whereas Palestinian militants 'kidnap'?" (Email, June 29, 2006)
Fickling replied:
"There
is a well-attested distinction between arrest - an action carried out
by a state as the first step of a well-defined legal process - and
kidnap, which is an action carried out by private individuals with no
defined outcome, enforceable purpose, or rights of review or release."
(Email, June 29, 2006)
In reality there is no "well-defined
legal process" protecting the Hamas politicians "arrested" by the
Israelis. Of what crimes have they been accused? Are we to believe that
they have any rights of review or release whatever? Quite the reverse;
the press reports that the subsequent bombings of empty Hamas political
offices were intended as a clear signal that Hamas's leaders can be
assassinated if Israel so desires.
The media have emphasised the
capture of the Israeli soldier as key in escalating tensions. On June
29, Stephen Farrell reported in The Times "a dramatic escalation of the
conflict sparked by the abduction". (Farrell, 'Tanks go into Gaza as
Jewish settler is murdered,' The Times, June 29, 2006)
On June
30, the Financial Times reported "the rapid escalation of the crisis
sparked by last Sunday's kidnap" (Ferry Biedermann and Roula Khalaf,
'Abbas appeals to UN over arrests,' Financial Times, June 30, 2006).
The BBC described the Palestinian attack as "a major escalation in
cross-border tensions". (BBC World News, June 25, 2006)
Few
readers will be aware that on June 24, the day before the "kidnapping",
Israeli commandos had entered the Gaza Strip and captured two
Palestinians claimed by Israel to be members of Hamas. (See our Guest
Media Alert by Jonathan Cook, 'Kidnapped by Israel'; http://www.medialens.org/alerts/ 06/060630_kidnapped_by_israel.php)
Nor
have the press suggested that the one-sided nature of the killing in
the weeks leading up to the capture of the Israeli soldier might have
"sparked" Palestinian actions.
On June 8, the Israeli army
assassinated the recently appointed Palestinian head of the security
forces of the Interior Ministry, Jamal Abu Samhadana, and three others.
On June 9, Israeli shells killed seven members of the same family
picnicking on Beit Lahiya beach. Some 32 others were wounded, including
13 children.
On June 13, an Israeli plane fired a missile into
a busy Gaza City street, killing 11 people, including two children and
two medics. On June 20, the Israeli army killed three Palestinian
children and injured 15 others in Gaza with a missile attack. On June
21, the Israelis killed a 35-year old pregnant woman, her brother, and
injured 11 others, including 6 children. Then came the Israeli capture
of two Palestinians, followed by the Palestinian capture of the Israeli
soldier and the killing of the two other soldiers.
After the
beach deaths, Hamas, the ruling party in the Palestinian Authority,
broke an 18-month ceasefire and joined other militant groups in firing
Kassam rockets into Israel. The Financial Times reported on June 23
that the missiles, principally targeted towards the Israel town of
Sderot, have caused damage and some casualties but no fatalities in the
recent barrages. A June 29 Guardian leader noted that the home-made
Kassam rockets are "not in the same league as Israel's hi-tech (though
not always accurate) weaponry". (Leader, 'Storm over Gaza,' The
Guardian, June 29, 2006)
In an interview for Democracy Now,
Norman Finkelstein, Professor of Political Science at DePaul University
in Chicago, compared the lethality of Israeli and Palestinian weapons:
"Since
Israel withdrew from Gaza in September 2005 'til today, the estimates
run between 7,000 and 9,000 heavy artillery shells have been shot and
fired into Gaza. On the Palestinian side, the estimates are
approximately 1,000 Kassam missiles, crude missiles, have been fired
into Israel. So we have a ratio of between seven and nine to one.
"Let's
look at casualties. In the last six months, approximately 80
Palestinians have been killed in Gaza due to Israel artillery firing...
There have been exactly eight Israelis killed in the last five years
from the Kassam missiles. Again, we have a huge disproportion, a huge
discrepancy." ('AIPAC v. Norman Finkelstein: A Debate on Israel's
Assault on Gaza,' June 29, 2006; http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl? sid=06/06/29/1420258)
Finkelstein
also compared the situation with regard to hostages: "let's talk about
those 9,000 Palestinians who are effectively hostages being held by
Israel. 1,000 of them are administrative detainees... Administrative
detainees who are being held without any charges or trial. And the
other 8,000 are being held after military courts have convicted them,
almost always on the basis of confessions which were extracted by
torture. So if we're going to look simply at the numbers, we have one
hostage on the Palestinian side, and effectively we have about 9,000 on
the Israeli side."
Earlier this month, the Israeli human
rights organisation, B'Tselem, published fatality figures for June 2006
in the Occupied Territories and Israel. Forty-two Palestinians, six of
them minors, were killed by Israeli armed forces. Twenty-four of the
fatalities were bystanders not involved in the conflict. (http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/EKOI-6RC53K? OpenDocument&rc=3&cc=isr )
B'Tselem's
figures do not include the seven members of the Ghaliya family killed
on Beit Lahiya beach. However, a June 17 report by Donald Macintyre in
the Independent "cast doubt on crucial elements of the conclusion of
the military investigation which absolved Israel of any
responsibility". (Macintyre, 'Hospital casts doubt on Israel's version
of attack that killed seven Palestinians,' The Independent, June 17,
2006)
According to B'Tselem, in May 2006, 36 Palestinians were
killed by Israeli security forces, one Israeli civilian died from
injuries he sustained the previous month. At time of writing, Israeli
soldiers have killed a total of six Palestinians since the re-invasion.
Collective Punishment - Frailer Palestinians Are Dying
Having
killed many more people in recent weeks, Israel's response to the
soldier's capture has been to heap yet more suffering on the
Palestinian people. Israel re-invaded Gaza with 5,000 troops on June 27
and then bombed Gaza's only electrical generating station, so depriving
half a million people of electricity. Human Rights Watch commented:
"The
destruction of the power station could quickly cause a humanitarian
crisis in Gaza, as electricity is essential to power the water system,
sewage treatment, and medical services". ('Gaza: Israeli Offensive Must
Limit Harm to Civilians,' June 29, 2006; http://hrw.org/english/docs/2006/ 06/29/isrlpa13662.htm)
In
the same attack, Israel destroyed three bridges, and the main water
pipes for two refugee camps. Will Hutton noted in the Observer:
"Sealing off access to water and food can only inflict acute discomfort
on the people there; already, frailer Palestinians are dying." (Hutton,
'Israel's act of war is inexcusable,' The Observer, July 2, 2006)
The
Guardian wrote: "The electricity supply to half of Gaza has been cut,
and all supplies of fuel and food have been halted." Amazingly, the
same article added: "Israeli aircraft and forces operated without
harming anyone." (Conal Urquhart, 'Israel rounds up Hamas politicians,'
The Guardian, June 29, 2006)
Prior to these attacks, Save the
Children's UK Programme Manager Jan Coffey reported that 78% of the
population in Gaza were living below the poverty line with 10% of
children under five suffering from chronic malnutrition. In June, the
World Food Programme reported that 51% of Palestinians - 2 million
people - were unable to meet their food needs without aid, and that in
Gaza, "the situation is becoming critical". (Justin Podur, 'Summer
rains,' ZNet; http://www.zmag.org/content/ showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10500)
The
extent of media bias is exemplified by the New York Times which
reported July 3: "for all the pyrotechnics, the [Israeli] operation has
been relatively restrained". (Ian Fisher and Steven Erlanger, 'Israel
steps up Gaza raids in bid to free soldier,' New York Times, July 3,
2006)
This represents the view of Western journalists numbed to
the suffering the West and its allies consistently heap on impoverished
Third World people. To merely inflict intense suffering on hundreds of
thousands of people, rather than to kill them, is "relatively
restrained" for elite media executives. On July 2, the Israeli
newspaper Ha'aretz reported that "Israel's 'public diplomacy' efforts",
aimed at getting the Western media to support Israeli army operations
had borne fruit: "The American newspapers The New York Times and The
Washington Post have published editorials that placed responsibility
for the crisis on Hamas." (Aluf Benn, 'US warns Israel not to harm
Abbas or civilians,' Ha'aretz, July 2, 2006) Quite an achievement.
On
the BBC's July 3 Newsnight programme, anchor Jeremy Paxman reported
breaking news that a Palestinian had been killed and two wounded in an
Israeli airstrike in Northern Gaza. Paxman then went on to interview an
Israeli government spokesman, Mark Regev. Regev said: "Our preference,
our chosen policy preference, is that he [Shalit] is released and this
can end peacefully." Paxman said not a word in response about the death
he had just reported, about the five other deaths, or about people
dying because of the attack on the power station.
In a rare
departure from Western silence, the Swiss Foreign Ministry declared
this week: "A number of actions by the Israeli defense forces in their
offensive against the Gaza Strip have violated the principle of
proportionality and are to be seen as forms of collective punishment,
which is forbidden." (Bradley S. Klapper, 'Switzerland: Israel
violating law in Gaza,' Seattle Post-Intelligencer, July 3, 2006; http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/ national/1103AP_Switzerland_Israel.html)
The
Swiss statement referred to provisions of the 1949 treaty of the Geneva
Conventions, regarded as the cornerstone of international law on the
obligations of warring and occupying powers. A key section reads:
"It
is prohibited to attack, destroy, remove or render useless objects
indispensable to the survival of the civilian population." (Cited,
'PCHR Warns of a Humanitarian Crisis in the Gaza Strip,' July 2, 2006; http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/ PressR/English/2006/66-2006.htm)
At
time of writing, the word 'Gaza' has been mentioned in 314 UK newspaper
articles over the previous two weeks. The words 'Geneva conventions'
have been mentioned in just 12 of these.
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Write to David Fickling Email: david.fickling@guardian.co.uk
Write to Conal Urquhart Email: conal.urquhart@guardian.co.uk
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