BBC forced to change pro-Israel headline over killing of baby twins

  • Post last modified:August 16, 2024
  • Reading time:5 mins read


The BBC has changed a headline after facing pressure. Initially, the headline failed to say that Israel carried out the airstrike, which killed two newborn twins in Gaza:

The father of Asser and Ayssel said “I didn’t even have the time to celebrate them”. They were only four days old. He was out collecting their birth certificates when Israel killed them and their mother.

Israel has killed 115 babies who were born since the bombardment of Gaza began.

Criticism of the BBC

Others further criticised the BBC. They said the new headline still left it open to question as to whether Israel killed the infants, in suggesting it’s only a claim:

On 10 August, the BBC faced more backlash. This time, its headline called out Israel first try. But it did not mention that the strike was on a school:

An Al Jazeera investigation into the Israeli strike in question – on al-Tabin school in Gaza City – found it was “deliberately timed to cause maximum casualties”. It said there were a “large number of displaced people deliberately targeted”. In five weeks, Israel has bombed at least 18 schools in Gaza.

People on social media branded another BBC headline, from December 2023, as a “lesson in propaganda”:

The Israeli airstrike killed Palestinian professor Refaat Alareer who taught literature at the Islamic University of Gaza. He co-founded the organisation We are Not Numbers, which trained young writers through matching them with more experienced ones.

And it’s not just the headlines. In another BBC piece, the outlet painted Israel’s aim to colonise Gaza as “Who wouldn’t want a beach house?”

Also, content analysis from the Centre for Media Monitoring found that the BBC and other corporate outlets show “overwhelming” bias in favour of Israel. The report found outlets remove context through failing to mention Israel’s occupation of Palestine, as well as that the BBC failed to challenge genocidal language from Israeli officials.

Featured image via Reuters – YouTube





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