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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, August 06, 2001 |
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Political correctness, BBC style
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, AUG 5. When is an ``assassination'' not an assassination?
When the BBC is reporting the killings of Palestinian guerillas
by Israeli soldiers. The BBC has been criticised for advising its
correspondents in West Asia not to describe Israeli killings of
Palestinians as ``assassination'', and instead stick to the
Israeli euphemism ``targeted attacks''. ``Assassination'' is to
be used while reporting or referring to the killing of leading
political or religious figures or high-ranking government
officials. Palestinian killings of Israelis, however, would
continue to be described as ``assassination'' or ``murder''.
The Independent, which broke the BBC's new code, said it was seen
as a ``surrender to Israeli diplomatic pressure'' but the BBC
denied it. In the past, Israel has accused the BBC of a pro-
Palestinian bias and observers termed its decision not to call a
spade a spade anymore as a concession to Israeli sensitivities.
According to The Independent's West Asia correspondent, Robert
Fisk, BBC reporters were ``amazed'' when they received a
memorandum suggesting that there were ``lots of other words for
death'' and the word assassination should be used only for high-
profile political murders. He called it ``covert censorship''
pointing out that so far only the CNN ``held the prize for soft
reporting on Israel.''
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