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"It never happened..."

John Pilger

Published 26 July 2007

Concealed during the Alan Johnston kidnap crisis was the fate of a Palestinian cameraman shot by the Israelis. The BBC, desperate to deny charges of "bias", refused to follow the story.

One of the leaders of demonstrations in Gaza calling for the release of the BBC reporter Alan Johnston was a Palestinian news cameraman, Imad Ghanem. On 5 July, he was shot by Israeli soldiers as he filmed them invading Gaza. A Reuters video shows bullets hitting his body as he lay on the ground. An ambulance trying to reach him was also attacked. The Israelis described him as a "legitimate target". The International Federation of Journalists called the shooting "a vicious and brutal example of deliberate targeting of a journalist". At the age of 21, he has had both legs amputated.

Dr David Halpin, a British trauma surgeon who works with Palestinian children, emailed the BBC's Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen. "The BBC should report the alleged details about the shooting," he wrote. "It should honour Alan [Johnston] as a journalist by reporting the facts, uncomfortable as they might be to Israel."

He received no reply.

The atrocity was reported in two sentences on the BBC online. Along with 11 Palestinian civilians killed by the Israelis on the same day, Alan Johnston's now legless champion slipped into what George Orwell in Nineteen Eighty-Four called the memory hole. (It was Winston Smith's job at the Ministry of Truth to make disappear all facts embarrassing to Big Brother.) While Alan Johnston was being held, I was asked by the BBC World Service if I would say a few words of support for him. I readily agreed, and suggested I also mention the thousands of Palestinians abducted and held hostage. The answer was a polite no; and all the other hostages remained in the memory hole. Or, as Harold Pinter wrote of such unmentionables: "It never happened. Nothing ever happened . . . It didn't matter. It was of no interest."

The media wailing over the BBC's royal photo-shoot fiasco and assorted misdemeanours provide the perfect straw man. They complement a self-serving BBC internal inquiry into news bias, which dutifully supplied the Daily Mail with hoary grist that the corporation is a left-wing plot. Such shenanigans would be funny were it not for the true story behind the facade of elite propaganda that presents humanity as useful or expendable, worthy or unworthy, and the Middle East as the Anglo-American crime that never happened, didn't matter, was of no interest.

The other day, I turned on Radio 4 and heard a cut-glass voice announce a programme about Iraqi interpreters working for "the British coalition forces" and warning that "listeners might find certain descriptions of violence disturbing". Not a word referred to those of "us" directly and ultimately responsible for the violence. The programme was called Face the Facts. Is satire that dead? Not yet. The warmonger David Aaron ovitch is to interview Blair in the BBC's "major retrospective" of the sociopath's rule.

Bringing democracy

Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four lexicon of opposites pervades almost everything we see, hear and read now. The invaders and destroyers are "the British coalition forces", surely as benign as the St John Ambulance, who are "bringing democracy" to Iraq. Newsnight describes Israel as having "two hostile Palestinian entities on its borders", neatly inverting the truth that Israel is actually inside Palestinian borders. A study by Glasgow University says that young British viewers of TV news believe Israelis illegally colonising Palestinian land are Palestinians: the victims are the invaders.

"The great crimes against most of humanity", wrote the American cultural critic James Petras, "are justified by a corrosive debasement of language and thought . . . [that] have fabricated a linguistic world of terror, of demons and saviours, of axes of good and evil, of euphemisms" designed to disguise a state terror that is "a gross perversion" of democracy, liberation, reform, justice. In his reinauguration speech, George Bush mentioned all these words, whose meaning, for him, is the dictionary opposite.

It is 80 years since Edward Bernays, the father of public relations, predicted a pervasive "invisible government" of corporate spin, suppression and silence as the true ruling power in the United States. That is true today on both sides of the Atlantic. How else could America and Brit ain go on such a spree of death and mayhem on the basis of stupendous lies about non-existent weapons of mass destruction, even a "mushroom cloud over New York"? When the BBC radio reporter Andrew Gilligan reported the truth, he was pilloried and sacked along with the director general, while Blair, the proven liar, was protected by the liberal wing of the media and given a standing ovation in parliament.

The same is happening again over Iran, distracted, it is hoped, by spin that David Miliband is a "sceptic" about the crime in Iraq when, in fact, he has been an accomplice, and by unctuous Kennedy-quoting Foreign Office propaganda about the Foreign Secretary's "new world order".

"What do you think of Iran's complicity in attacks on British soldiers in Basra?" Miliband was asked by the Financial Times.

Miliband: "Well, I think that any evidence of Iranian engagement there is to be deplored. I think that we need regional players to be supporting stability, not fomenting discord, never mind death . . ."

FT: "Just to be clear, there is evidence?"

Miliband: "Well no, I chose my words carefully . . ."

The coming war on Iran, including the possibility of a nuclear attack, has already begun as a war by journalism. Count the number of times "nuclear weapons programme" and "nuclear threat" are spoken and written, yet neither exists, says the International Atomic Energy Agency. On 21 June, the New York Times went further and advertised an "urgent" poll, headed: "Should we bomb Iran?" The questions beneath referred to Iran being "a greater threat than Saddam Hussein" and asked: "Who should undertake military action against Iran first . . . ?" The choice was "US. Israel. Neither country".

So tick your favourite bombers.

The last British war to be fought without censorship and "embedded" journalists was the Crimea a century and a half ago. The bloodbath of the First World War and the Cold War might never have happened without their unpaid (and paid) propagandists. Today's invisible government is no less served, especially by those who censor by omission. The craven liberal campaign against the first real hope for the poor of Vene zuela is a striking example.

However, there are major differences. Official disinformation now is often aimed at a critical public intelligence, a growing awareness in spite of the media. This "threat" from a public often held in contempt has been met by the insidious transfer of much of journalism to public relations. Some years ago, PR Week estimated that the amount of "PR-generated material" in the media is "50 per cent in a broadsheet newspaper in every section apart from sport. In the local press and the mid-market and tabloid nationals, the figure would undoubtedly be higher. Music and fashion journalists and PRs work hand in hand in the editorial process . . . PRs provide fodder, but the clever high-powered ones do a lot of the journalists' thinking for them."

This is known today as "perception man agement". The most powerful are not the Max Cliffords but huge corporations such as Hill & Knowlton, which "sold" the slaughter known as the first Gulf war, and the Sawyer Miller Group, which sold hated, pro-Washington regimes in Colombia and Bolivia and whose operatives included Mark Malloch Brown, the new Foreign Office minister, currently being spun as anti-Washington. Hundreds of millions of dollars go to corporations spinning the carnage in Iraq as a sectarian war and covering up the truth: that an atrocious invasion is pinned down by a successful resistance while the oil is looted.

The other major difference today is the ab dication of cultural forces that once provided dissent outside journalism. Their silence has been devastating. "For almost the first time in two centuries," wrote the literary and cultural critic Terry Eagleton, "there is no eminent Brit ish poet, playwright or novelist prepared to question the foundations of the western way of life." The lone, honourable exception is Harold Pinter. Eagleton listed writers and playwrights who once promised dissent and satire and instead became rich celebrities, ending the legacy of Shelley and Blake, Carlyle and Ruskin, Morris and Wilde, Wells and Shaw. He singled out Martin Amis, a writer given tombstones of column inches in which to air his pretensions, along with his attacks on Muslims. The following is from a recent article by Amis:

Tony strolled over [to me] and said, "What have you been up to today?"

"I've been feeling protective of my prime minister, since you ask."

For some reason our acquaintanceship, at least on my part, is becoming mildly but deplorably flirtatious.

What these elite, embedded voices share is their participation in an essentially class war, the long war of the rich against the poor. That they play their part in a broadcasting studio or in the clubbable pages of the review sections and that they think of themselves as liberals or conservatives is neither here nor there. They belong to the same crusade, waging the same battle for their enduring privilege.

In The Serpent, Marc Karlin's dreamlike film about Rupert Murdoch, the narrator describes how easily Murdochism came to dominate the media and coerce the industry's liberal elite. There are clips from a keynote address that Murdoch gave at the Edinburgh Television Festival. The camera pans across the audience of TV executives, who listen in respectful silence as Murdoch flagellates them for suppressing the true voice of the people. They then applaud him. "This is the silence of the democrats," says the voice-over, "and the Dark Prince could bath in their silence."

http://www.johnpilger.com

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26 comments from readers

report this comment ellis
26 July 2007

Fantastic, at last a real journalist who is prepared to tell the truth, so many false and mamby pamby versions of events that have happened in Palestine. I applaud you Mr Pilger, you do tell it as it is. The Isralies

have got away with murder for years, and the world, led by America let them.

report this comment mitchy
26 July 2007

Its sobering just how close to the bone George Orwell was when he wrote 1984, it should be required reading for all of us.

That boot is already stamping on all our faces - wake up people!

report this comment Podders
27 July 2007

JP just get's better and better, clone him.

report this comment NewJorg
27 July 2007

John is a true inspiration and thanks to the New Statesman for publishing his "controversial" (i.e. true) comments and reports.

I know this will probably not get ready by many, but, speaking of 1984:

You have four more chances to catch AMERICAN NIGHTS at the King's Head Theatre. The main act, 2+2+2, was described by the New Statesman's Rosie Millard as "Nineteen Eighty-Four meets Starbucks."

Please come check it out. It's well worth the ticket price:

www.twoplustwoplustwo.com

report this comment Stan Rosenthal
27 July 2007

Another nauseous rant from Mr Pilger which has prompted me to submit a new verb to the OED i. e. "to pllger " which means "to grossly distort and exaggerate with a view to creating maximum hatred and alarm"."

report this comment Dani Bora
27 July 2007

Excellent article, Mr Pilger. You're definitely one of my journalistic heroes — I am a student of journalism in London, and I envisage a career similar to yours.

Only hitch of this page? You mention a shallow New York Times survey, but right next to this piece, seats an even shallower one.

'Are the floods the direct result of climate change?' asks the New Statesman...possible answers: Yes or No....I believe the issue requires a slightly deeper approach. Don't you?

report this comment Dan
27 July 2007

The crime of shooting this Palestinian Cameraman, and keep shooting him with while lying injured was despicable . but not unexpected from Israel who has done worse than that.

Ignoring this story by the BBC who is preparing to launch a new BBC Arabic Channel, was one of their biggest mistakes in my opinion; Viewers in the Middle East have seen the story on Aljazeera, and made the comparison between the treatment of Mr Johnston and his fellow Palestinian journalist.

How did ignoring this story, helped selling the new channel to it's targeted viewers?

Mr Bilger has been always an example of Honest & factual journalism. Keep up the good work sir.

report this comment dave
28 July 2007

Mr Pilger long ago lost any pretentions of his to be an unbiased observer of events in the Israel-Palestine debate. He has proved himself to be simply someone who almost invariably only finds fault with one side, namely, Israel, whilst failing to report faults committed by the other side, namely Palestinian. He is what can be termed an unreliable expert witness, and is accordingly discredited as an objective observer.

report this comment Douglas Chalmers
28 July 2007

"It never happened..." - same with "The Balibo Five" who were a group of journalists for Australian television networks based in the town of Balibo in the then Portuguese Timor who were killed on October 16, 1975 by Indonesian troops mounting incursions, prior to the Indonesian invasion of East Timor..... no resolution to this day .....and a cover-up by the Australian government in its own complicity!

report this comment GideonPolya
29 July 2007

Excellent, humane article by John Pilger. However there is of course a vastly a bigger picture of overall violent and non-violent Palestinian deaths at the hands of the war criminal Israeli Occupiers.

Thus the B’tselem Israeli human rights group (see: http://www.btselem.org/English/Statistics/Casualties.asp ) lists 29/9/2000-25/7/2007 Palestinian violent deaths at the hands of Israel security forces in the Occupied Territories (OPT) (4,117) and in Israel (61) and by Israeli civilians in the OPT (41) (total = 4,219) VERSUS Israeli civilians killed by Israeli civilians in the OPT (233) and in Israel (471) (total 704) plus Israeli forces killed by Palestinian in the OPT (233) and in Israel (87) (total 320).

A truly sickening set of statistics for the same period is the Palestinian MINORS (KIDS) killed by Israeli forces in the OPT (843) and in Israel (2) (total 845) VERSUS Israeli minors killed by Palestinians in the OPT (39) and in Israel (80) (total 119). ALL utterly shocking and due to Racist Zionist Occupation.

Racist Zionists have perverted rational discussion in the West of such mutual atrocities by use of racially-selective, anti-Arab anti-Semitic “terrorism” terminology. Thus the neutral term “homicide” is to be preferred which yields the Mainstream media UN-REPORTED statistic that about 80% of “homicides” in the Holy Land each year are committed by Jewish Israelis (see: http://mwcnews.net/content/view/14899/42/ and http://mwcnews.net/content/view/7958/26/ ).

However avoidable deaths (excess deaths, deaths that should not have happened) in the OPT are either VIOLENT (as above) or NON-VIOLENT (e.g. through war criminal Apartheid Israeli non-provision of life-sustaining requisites unequivocally demanded of Occupiers by the Geneva Convention).

From UN Population Division and UNICEF data it can be estimated that post-invasion (i.e. post-1967) excess deaths in the OPT total 0.3 million and the post-invasion under-5 infant deaths 0.2 million (mostly avoidable) (see “Body Count. Global avoidable mortality since 1950”: http://globalbodycount.blogspot.com/ ). Each year nearly as many Occupied Palestinian under-5 year old infants die avoidably (2,400) as there have been Israeli victims of Palestinian violence over the last SIXTY (60) years (2,600) (see: http://mwcnews.net/content/view/14899/42/ ).

Racist Zionist-run Apartheid Israel, its racist Bush-ite Western supporters and Western Mainstream media IGNORE this sustained, race-based, large-scale active and passive killing of Palestinian children - "It never happened ...". Shame on them all – bring on the war crimes trials.

report this comment GideonPolya
29 July 2007

Correction: para 2 above should of course read "VERSUS Israeli civilians killed by PALESTINIANS in the OPT (233) and in Israel (471) (total 704)".

report this comment Tobygold
30 July 2007

Er, please, the premise is false. The comparisons between the kidnapping of Johnson and the death of Imad Ghanem are spurious, and the the BBC has no more reason to report Ghanem's death than the thousands of under-reported deaths around the world every week. The fact is that any deaths at the hands of Israeli soldiers generates far, far more ink than the deaths of Palestinians at the hands of their own. That's the real double standard.

report this comment Tobygold
30 July 2007

And the poll in The New York Times that Pilger uses to illustrate his case was actually a paid ad on the WEBSITE of the New York Times... just one example of the way in which Pilger seeks to distort the facts... (Pilger, one has to suspect, got this "scoop" not from actually reading the New York Times, god forbid--that would be real research--but from his mutual appreciation club, David Edwards and David Cromwell).

report this comment Dan
30 July 2007

Tobygold;

Mr Pilger has clearly stated ( The NY Times ......ADVERTISED an "urgrent" poll ). Your comments confirmed his honestly in every word he used in the article.

By the way this is the first time I ever read a comment supporting News Corportion for NOT reporting news.

report this comment naftalim
31 July 2007

This is an email I sent to John Pilger

John,

I'm surprised you didnt offer to join Alan Johnston in his comfortable "vacation" in Gaza among those "victimized" Palestinians.

After all, we Israelis are all the evil ones, and those poor shmucks from Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the like are just really boy scouts. Hizbollah and their Iranian patrons are the true model for what all decent human beings should aspire to. Syia is the next Switzerland. The Iraqis murdering each other daily? Any sane person should know that its us Israelis behind it, just like we are responsible for all wars, the death of Princess Diana, Hurricane Katrina, and the defection of David Beckham to Los Angeles.

Sorry, John, that we do not meet your exalted expectations of what people need to do to defend themselves against fanatics. One would think that after we were taught a lesson in World War II that we would know our place, but you know us Jews, you can never trust us. Keep your eyes open, you never know where our greedy fingers will be next.

report this comment Cybertiger
01 August 2007

@naftalim, 31 July 2007

" .... but you know us Jews, you can never trust us. Keep your eyes open, you never know where our greedy fingers will be next."

As a devout atheist, I abhor this type of banal religious stereotyping.

PS. I do wonder, however, how G-d will eventually achieve a final solution to the Arab problem in the Middle East. In the absence of any other kind of resolution to the problem, no doubt, He will have to take a close look at the nuclear option.

report this comment davef
01 August 2007

Well done John. You are my hero. Keep plugging away at the American fascists and their nasty little war criminal, lick-spittle client states like Israel and ..er. 'Great' Britain.

Sorry to sound bonkers, but it fits in with the spirit of some of the responses to your piece.

report this comment alzwick13
05 August 2007

I agee with Mr. Pilger that one should always be sceptical of journalistic bias.

The problem is that sword cuts both ways. Mr. Pilger shows a complete lack of balance. He uses 1984 as an example, but calling Tony Blair a "psychcopath" is the sort of thing that was done during the hate period every morning in the novel. More importantly, it shows his bias.

Also, I notice Mr. Pilger is very complimentary of Harold Pinter. It is interesting though that in his introduction. Mr. Pilger quotes Mr. Pinter being very complimentary of him. So, basically, they trading boot-lickings. How very brave and independent of Mr. Pilger.

I sincerely hope this article was published in the print version under the editorial, and not the news section,

report this comment taghioff.info
05 August 2007

Well, even if Pilger is being polemic, what he is calling attention to is siginificant. There are of course other stories to tell, but this one is still worth telling.

How can we be engaging in an illegal war, and yet be so complacent about it?

The media is often over-critical of politicians on domestic issues, and yet when it comes to foreign policy, where the greatest atrocities most often occur, suddenly journalism becomes strangely loyal to its government. There is a long trail of academic content analysis (e.g. by the Glasgow media group) to back that there is such a gap between domestic and foreign reporting.

Even if you don't like polemics, you need to think carefully about media power if you want to understand contemporary politics, so I think John's article is timely.

report this comment phil
06 August 2007

Please. John Pilger`s `truth` is a suspect as anyone else`s `truth`. He has his own agenda as do we all. I just don`t buy the argument that all is the fault of the US and that Harold Pinter is some kind of political gold standard. But, of course, this is my version of `truth`. Facts?Forget them. Just ask the question: who writes the history books? We know what Pilger`s will say ,ain`t that the truth.

report this comment NS Admin
07 August 2007

From letters to the editor:

Pilger's black and white

John Pilger (30 July) loses credibility when he says the western media are "spinning the carnage in Iraq as a sectarian war" and covering up "the truth that an invasion is being pinned down by a successful resistance". The Iraq war is unforgiveable, but rather too many Iraqis seem intent on killing one another for reasons unallied to the presence of foreign troops to justify Pilger's blinkered description, although it seems possible the western media are exaggerating the sectarian aspects and underplaying the resistance.

Dr Neville W Goodman

report this comment Harry
13 August 2007

pilger, are you, a hardened communist, criticizing western media? Thats rich, coming from a man who thinks that the state should own everything, including the press. Id like to see the system you want giving unbiased coverage. Even your bland essays would be banned under your system.

report this comment jamesbt20
20 August 2007

Thanks John Great article I sometimes think.. nah he's bound to be over the hill now but everytime you stop me in my tracks.. You and Fisky have similar basket weaving styles were you leave a few ends late which improves the overall quality of the Basket but your Baskets have a maturity to them Fisky may never match if you avoid mocking him

.......erm ... Harry, Its past your bedtime mate...

"Criticizing" western media.. what media?erm

Lets compare Brazil and Russia over the last 80 odd years one communist and one capalist country... but hey !! guess what.. the Brazilians were free theyve got nought but theyre living in a democracy.. you bin watchin your Western Media to much again Brazil was a great place 80 years ago... And cuba is an economic miracle in spite of a 30 year embargo..... wind your neck in....

report this comment pugnax
20 August 2007

Great article, Mr. Pilger. I wish we had you over here. Not that you would find easy acces to media outlets or be paid much attention to. The fix is in. It always is. Judith Miller will rise again and the world will be suffering.

report this comment Harry
21 August 2007

from jamesbt20

"Lets compare Brazil and Russia over the last 80 odd years one communist and one capalist country... but hey !! guess what.. the Brazilians were free theyve got nought but theyre living in a democracy.. you bin watchin your Western Media to much again Brazil was a great place 80 years ago... And cuba is an economic miracle in spite of a 30 year embargo..... wind your neck in...."

Why on earth would you compare brazil to russia?! Are you saying that brazil, a poor country with an unpredictable, undeveloped democracy, is the standard western democracy? My word, you have low standards even for a communist. And to say Cuba is a great place is a little silly isnt it? Ill tell you what- go to Cuba, and say "Brazil is a great place with a great system. Lets copy it". Theyll put you in prison. Yeah, lovely place, cuba. They even have shoes made out of spinach.

report this comment JimmyJames
22 August 2007

Without John's incisive reporting we would be totally at the mercy of so-called journalists who are nothing but establishment managers. John and a select few other journalists (like Robert Fisk) are providing a true alternative perspective but the majority of the public still have no access to this

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About the writer

John Pilger, renowned investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, is one of only two to have twice won British journalism's top award; his documentaries have won academy awards in both the UK and the US. In a New Statesman survey of the 50 heroes of our time, Pilger came fourth behind Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela. "John Pilger," wrote Harold Pinter, "unearths, with steely attention facts, the filthy truth. I salute him."

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