CNN Conceals Truth about PA Broadcasting
Andrea Levin, Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America
February 3, 2002
CNN reporter Rula Amins zealous pro-Palestinian bias
was conspicuous once again on January 19th. Recounting Israeli destruction of
several floors of the Palestinian Broadcasting Corporation in Ramallah, in the
wake of the Palestinian murder of Jewish guests at a Bat Mitzvah in Hadera, she
presented only angry, distraught Arab speakers denouncing Israel. (The radio
arm of the PBC resumed broadcasting almost immediately from another locale and
the main headquarters of the television division located in Gaza was untouched,
permitting most of its programs to continue.)
Amins only nod to Israeli views was a perfunctory:
Israel says the Voice of Palestine is used by the Palestinian Authority
for incitement against Israel and Israelis. She quickly added:
Palestinian officials say they only report what Israel does. Amin
omitted mention of even one example of the incendiary content Israelis have
long protested.
Indeed, among the most disastrous developments in the
pursuit of peace between Israelis and Palestinians must surely be counted the
creation of the Palestinian Broadcasting Corporation. Established in the early
years of Oslo, both the television and radio arms soon became potent vehicles
for amplifying anti-Israel propaganda in a way that had not been possible
previously.
From the outset, PA television has offered sinister fare.
One 1998 Palestinian childrens series presented sweet-faced little girls
singing songs about becoming suicide bombers and drenching the ground with
blood in the march to Jerusalem. Against a backdrop of Disney figures, teachers
exclaimed Bravo, bravo! to those most ardently pledging themselves
to violence. Declarations of devotion to martyrdom and extolling of past
terrorist killers of Israelis were commonplace.
More recently, as Palestinian negotiators at Camp David
moved toward abandoning peace talks in the summer of 2000, PA television turned
to graphic images of old Intifada clashes and funerals. Martial music
accompanied inflammatory footage.
With the outbreak of rioting in September 2000, Palestinian
broadcasting continued to stoke violence. A news story by USA Todays Jack
Kelley about the Voice of Palestine radio described in dramatic fashion
agitated VOP radio reports claiming Israel was bombing and killing children in
Bethlehem. Yet on visiting that town, all was quiet. Similar fraudulent reports
charged settlers were shooting Palestinian women in
Hebron, where no such violence had occurred. In Nablus Israeli troops were
alleged to be burning homes where, again, no such thing was
happening.
One report, according to Kelley, even claimed hundreds
of jets and helicopters are taking off from the aircraft carrier belonging to
the criminal occupation force. Israel has no aircraft carriers.
PA television has regularly delivered as well incendiary
Friday sermons by religious leaders. One day after the Ramallah lynching of two
Israelis, Ahmad Abu Halabiya, a member of the PA-appointed Fatwa Council,
called on listeners to find and butcher Jews no matter where they are, in
any country. Fight them, wherever you are. Wherever you meet them, kill
them.
One week after the Dolphinarium bombing on June 1, 2001 in
Tel Aviv in which 21 people, mainly young girls, were killed, PA television
carried the sermon of Sheik Ibrahim Al-Madhi. He said: Blessings to
whoever waged Jihad for the sake of Allah; blessings to whoever raided for the
sake of Allah; blessings to whoever put a belt of explosives on his body or on
his sons and plunged into the midst of the Jews, crying Allahu
Akbar...
In July, a Friday sermon on PA TV exhorted Palestinians to
train their children in the love of Jihad for the sake of Allah and the
love of fighting for the sake of Allah. Sheik Ibrahim Al-Madhi told his
audience that local Jews not from other countries, and Christians,
could live as Dhimmis among the Muslims as unequal,
subordinate peoples.
In August on PA television, Sheik Ismail Aal Ghadwan
admonished listeners to seek martyrdom, holding up as a model those who offered
their own mutilated bodies as tokens of sacrifice. He said:
The sacrifice of convoys of martyrs
[will continue] until Allah grants us victory very soon. The willingness for
sacrifice and for death we see amongst those who were cast by Allah into a war
with the Jews, should not come at all as a surprise... (All translations are
from MEMRI, Middle East Media Research Institute)
One Palestinian broadcast that made news in 2001 on American
television was that containing, in the words of NBC correspondent Martin
Fletcher, a commercial for child martyrdom. In vivid re-enactments,
Palestinian boys and girls were shown to put down their toys and
pick up rocks and follow the path of martyrs. In the video, paradise awaiting
after death is depicted as an inviting, green, sunlit meadow where friends meet
and play.
That CNN and many other media outlets should
report Israeli attacks against PA broadcasting structures without so much as a
mention of the vile hatred emanating from its airwaves, poisoning the lives of
Palestinians and Israelis alike, is testimony to the determination of some
outlets to purvey a distorted, anti-Israel image of the conflict no matter how
divorced their coverage may be from the conflicts realities.
Andrea Levin is Executive Director of CAMERA - PO Box
35040, Boston, MA, 02135-0001.
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Copyright © 2002 by the Committee for Accuracy in
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