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Members of the Jewish community gather outside BBC Broadcasting House to
demonstrate against the BBC’s ongoing refusal to label Hamas as
terrorists, on October 16, 2023 in London, England. Following its broadcast of a documentary about the Gaza Strip on Monday, which happened to be narrated by the son of a Hamas official, the BBC has come under fire after being labeled a Hamas propaganda outlet. On February 17th, the one-hour documentary “Gaza: How to Survive a War Zone” was aired. Three children’s perspectives on the ongoing Middle East conflict were depicted in the program. Abdullah, 14, who is identified as “Abdullah al-Yazouri” in the documentary’s credits, takes on the role of narrator in the aired broadcast. Ayman Alyazouri, the deputy minister of agriculture in the Hamas-controlled administration, is Abdullah’s father. The boy’s father is a Hamas government minister. According to The Telegraph, viewers were not made aware of the child’s family connections. Soon after, in a formal complaint, Labour Against Antisemitism accused the BBC of failing to verify the participants’ backgrounds for the documentary.
David Collier, an investigative journalist and the first to reveal the controversies of the documentary, questioned how the filmmakers—especially the two local cameramen—could have been unaware of Abdullah’s family connections.
However, a BBC spokesman soon came to the defense of the filming, saying it: “was produced in line with BBC editorial guidelines and the BBC had full editorial control,” adding “the children’s parents did not have any editorial input.”
Meanwhile, former BBC executive Danny Cohen, who also expressed that there is a “institutional crisis” at the outlet, told The Telegraph that the surfacing information reaffirmed his concerns — concerns related to how the network has seemingly turned into a defender of the Islamist terrorist group.
The child narrator in the documentary, Abdullah, was also mentioned in a previous BBC piece. He is seen discussing the “devastation in Gaza” in November 2023 while being accompanied by Khalil Abu Shamala, who was introduced to viewers as his “father” — though he actually appears to be his uncle. Additionally, Shamala appears to be the former director of Al Dameer, an NGO that spearheads campaigns to aid Palestinian prisoners. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a designated terrorist group in the U.S., E.U., Canada, and Israel — is connected to Al Dameer, according to the New York Post. Regarding the BBC, a number of previous employees of the network have also expressed that the outlet does not allow their writers to label Hamas as “terrorists.”
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