Politics and the BBC
With news yesterday that the head of the IAEA has refused to do an interview with the BBC, as he is boycotting them over the BBC’s decision not to show the DEC Gaza charity appeal, it makes me think that the BBC were wise not to show the film; anything that is controversial enough to lead people to protest could undermine their editorial independence.
Yes, I know the BBC have shown plenty of controversial programmes in the past, but there is a big difference between showing and standing by their own programming, and being pressured into showing an advert that was not created or commissioned by them.
Yes, I know the BBC have shown plenty of controversial programmes in the past, but there is a big difference between showing and standing by their own programming, and being pressured into showing an advert that was not created or commissioned by them.

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The BBC is very sensitive about the tone of its coverage of any stories involving Israel; it has had received widespread criticism in the past about the anti-Israeli bias of its news reporting, and it has put a lot of effort and money into keeping the Balen Report (2004) out of the public eye. I think nowadays the BBC is going out of its way to be as balanced as possible in its news and documentary coverage of Israel and Gaza, and is happy to avoid the issue entirely elsewhere.
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And the Beeb makes a big deal of its own charity-fests. It also used to show charity appeals regularly on a Sunday evening (that's where I first heard about one of my pet charities, the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture), but no longer seems to do so.
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The head of Sky News said, “…the nature of an appeal is that it sets out to provoke a specific response from the viewer. We don't believe that broadcasting such an appeal on Sky News can be combined with the balance and context that impartial journalism aims to bring to the highly charged and continuing conflict in Gaza.”
Sounds fair to me.
Taking sides
If the appeal were to guarantee that aid distribution would somehow be independent of Hamas influence, exclude their membership from the benefits and give an equal share to the victims of the conflict on both sides of the border, I might support it - but instead, there are already news reports of the international aid falling into Hamas hands.
Re: Taking sides