Post by Teddy Bear on Oct 7, 2012 0:18:47 GMT
Uncharacteristically, Human Rights Watch has criticized Hamas in a report for abuses against Gazans, including torture. Here first of all is the way the BBC present this story, followed by how The Commentator picked up the way the BBC helps to whitewash Hamas.
I notice in the BBC article, at the end of Jon Donnison's 'Analysis', he writes:
It is worth noting that many Hamas members say they have been the victims of torture themselves, either at the hands of Israel or rival Palestinian security forces from the Fatah movement.
They can say what they like, but without any substance to back it up - why is it worth noting?
Funny the BBC wasn't happy about running stories, that they claimed were unsubstantiated, when it concerned Jimmy Savile's sexual abuses, and their averting their gaze to let it continue.
Here's what Natalie Glanvill at the Commentator has to say about the BBC article:
Gazans face 'serious abuses' in criminal justice system
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip face "serious abuses" in the justice system, according to a report from pressure group Human Rights Watch (HRW).
The violations included arbitrary arrest, incommunicado detention, torture, and unfair trials, HRW said.
The Gaza Strip has been governed by the Islamist movement, Hamas, since it seized power there in 2007.
Hamas's deputy foreign minister said the allegations were being investigated but that the situation had improved.
"Maybe we have some violations from time to time, but it is not a widespread phenomenon," Ghazi Hamad told the BBC.
"I can confirm that there is no torture and we are trying to follow international law in all jails and prisons," he added.
Mr Hamad also stressed that in Gaza there was "no kind of political arrest... or any kind of punishment or torture of political activists", something which has been frequently alleged.
'Impunity'
HRW's report details cases of alleged torture and deaths in detention, other cases where due process was not followed and also criticises the practice of trying civilians in military courts.
One case cited is that of Abdel Karim Shrair, who was executed in May 2011 for allegedly collaborating with Israel.
HRW says the charges were partially based on confessions that appear to have been obtained using torture.
"After five years of Hamas rule in Gaza, its criminal justice system reeks of injustice, routinely violates detainees' rights," said Joe Stork, HRW's deputy Middle East director.
"Hamas should stop the kinds of abuses that Egyptians, Syrians, and others in the region have risked their lives to bring to an end."
Hamas officials claim that investigations are mounted into abuses by security services and says hundreds of members of the security services have been disciplined since 2007, the report says.
However, details of cases in which officials were censured have not been made public, according to HRW, adding that Hamas authorities have in practice granted "impunity to abusive security services".
Human rights groups have also criticised the Palestinian Authority, dominated by the rival Fatah movement of President Mahmoud Abbas, for abuses in the Palestinian-run justice system in the West Bank.
HRW notes that "Palestinian political rivalry remains a significant factor behind many Hamas abuses against detainees in Gaza," and adds that Hamas members in the West Bank face the risk of arbitrary arrest.
However, the report adds that "human rights lawyers in Gaza said that they have continued to receive the same kinds of allegations of abuse" even after an attempted reconciliation between the two sides last year.
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip face "serious abuses" in the justice system, according to a report from pressure group Human Rights Watch (HRW).
The violations included arbitrary arrest, incommunicado detention, torture, and unfair trials, HRW said.
The Gaza Strip has been governed by the Islamist movement, Hamas, since it seized power there in 2007.
Hamas's deputy foreign minister said the allegations were being investigated but that the situation had improved.
"Maybe we have some violations from time to time, but it is not a widespread phenomenon," Ghazi Hamad told the BBC.
"I can confirm that there is no torture and we are trying to follow international law in all jails and prisons," he added.
Mr Hamad also stressed that in Gaza there was "no kind of political arrest... or any kind of punishment or torture of political activists", something which has been frequently alleged.
'Impunity'
HRW's report details cases of alleged torture and deaths in detention, other cases where due process was not followed and also criticises the practice of trying civilians in military courts.
One case cited is that of Abdel Karim Shrair, who was executed in May 2011 for allegedly collaborating with Israel.
HRW says the charges were partially based on confessions that appear to have been obtained using torture.
Analysis - Jon Donnison
BBC News, Gaza City
Allegations of torture and police brutality against Hamas are not new. Many people in Gaza have a story to tell about rough justice at the hands of Hamas. This week, I met one young man who told me he had been arrested arbitrarily many times in the past five years and regularly beaten. He said police had used cigarette lighters to burn his legs and had threatened his family.
Human Rights Watch does not mince its words saying the criminal justice system here "reeks of injustice". But the group also accepts things have improved in recent years. Also significant is that Hamas has allowed HRW into Gaza to carry out the study and even hold a press conference.
Hamas is aware that allegations of police brutality and abuse have fueled anger in uprisings across the Middle East during the so called Arab Spring. It does not want to tarred with the same brush as Hosni Mubarak's Egypt or Bashar al-Assad's Syria. It is worth noting that many Hamas members say they have been the victims of torture themselves, either at the hands of Israel or rival Palestinian security forces from the Fatah movement.
"After five years of Hamas rule in Gaza, its criminal justice system reeks of injustice, routinely violates detainees' rights," said Joe Stork, HRW's deputy Middle East director.
"Hamas should stop the kinds of abuses that Egyptians, Syrians, and others in the region have risked their lives to bring to an end."
Hamas officials claim that investigations are mounted into abuses by security services and says hundreds of members of the security services have been disciplined since 2007, the report says.
However, details of cases in which officials were censured have not been made public, according to HRW, adding that Hamas authorities have in practice granted "impunity to abusive security services".
Human rights groups have also criticised the Palestinian Authority, dominated by the rival Fatah movement of President Mahmoud Abbas, for abuses in the Palestinian-run justice system in the West Bank.
HRW notes that "Palestinian political rivalry remains a significant factor behind many Hamas abuses against detainees in Gaza," and adds that Hamas members in the West Bank face the risk of arbitrary arrest.
However, the report adds that "human rights lawyers in Gaza said that they have continued to receive the same kinds of allegations of abuse" even after an attempted reconciliation between the two sides last year.
I notice in the BBC article, at the end of Jon Donnison's 'Analysis', he writes:
It is worth noting that many Hamas members say they have been the victims of torture themselves, either at the hands of Israel or rival Palestinian security forces from the Fatah movement.
They can say what they like, but without any substance to back it up - why is it worth noting?
Funny the BBC wasn't happy about running stories, that they claimed were unsubstantiated, when it concerned Jimmy Savile's sexual abuses, and their averting their gaze to let it continue.
Here's what Natalie Glanvill at the Commentator has to say about the BBC article:
BBC Gaza spin is deliberately pro-Hamas
Human Rights Watch report condemns injustice towards civilians in Gaza under Hamas rule
Natalie Glanvill
A damning report was published on Wednesday by Human Rights Watch (HRW) documenting how Hamas ‘security services in Gaza routinely conduct arrests without routinely presenting warrants, refuse to promptly inform families of detainees’ whereabouts, deny detainees’ access to a lawyer and torture detainee’s in custody’.
Laws that uphold the basic rights of citizens are routinely broken because Hamas’ ‘security forces commonly arrest civilians and present them before Gaza’s military judiciary, even though its remit should be limited to military offenses’.
The importance of this story remains with nearly two million people living under Hamas rule who live in fear of torture, warrantless arrest and trials without conviction.
So why did the UK’s biggest broadcaster choose to help Hamas whitewash this story? It was picked up by most major news and broadcasting outlets but the state-funded ‘impartial’ BBC has overstepped the mark in attempting to 'balance' its coverage of the report, promoting the denialist response from a Hamas spokesperson at the front and centre of its coverage.
Over the past few years, the BBC’s political coverage of the Middle East has been criticised by many for not providing the detailed and accurate news that readers, listeners and viewers are entitled to.
The corporation has also been suspected of an anti-Israel bias, which has been in its reporting on the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Instead of a deep look into the report itself, followed by examples of the abuses, the BBC waits only until the third line of its article to quote Hamas Deputy Foreign Minister Ghazi Hamad, who said: "Maybe we have some violations from time to time, but it is not a widespread phenomenon."
While clinging onto the reins of power in Gaza, Hamas is far from a legitimately elected government. Following the elections in 2006, the terrorist group set out to consolidate its power by murdering opposition figures and ruling the strip with an iron fist. Elections were previously due in 2010 but have now been delayed indefinitely.
Despite this, the BBC affords Hamas not just equal airtime in response to the report, but puts the Hamas line front and centre of their debate and further broadcasting the interview with Hamad on another page on its website. Bizarrely, though the story has nothing to do with Israel, the BBC also links highly to a 'special report' on Israel and the Palestinians, directly under the headline, "Gazans face 'serious abuses' in criminal justice system".
To report this story in such a way is not only inaccurate and misleading, but lends legitimacy to the terrorist government in Gaza. The BBC is not new to reporting the region through its green-tinted glasses, either. So far this year, The Commentator has revealed that the BBC refused to acknowledge Israel had a capital city under the ‘key facts’ section of its Olympic page, that the corporation spent a whopping £332,780.47 on legal fees to conceal the Middle-East ‘Balen Report’ from the public, and that the corporation uses online pictures which convey the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a distorted way. On every one of these matters, the BBC has had to express its ‘regret’ – yet nothing changes.
Injustice in Gaza under Hamas
“After five years of Hamas rule in Gaza, the criminal justice system reeks of injustice, routinely violates detainee’s rights, and grants impunity to abusive security services”, says Human Rights Watch Middle East Director Joe Stark.
An individual case study of injustice brought against Abdel Karim Shrair highlights the significant abuse of human rights and illegal actions used by the al-Qassam brigades, the Internal Security Service, the judicial system of the Military courts and Hamas authorities.
Before Shrair was ‘sentenced to death and executed by firing squad in May 2011 for ‘collaborating with Israel’, he allegedly endured torture for three weeks before being transferred to police custody, warrantless arrest and incommunicado detention and severe injuries across face, arms, legs and chest. The charge that was brought against Shrair in part was on the basis of information that his lawyer alleged was obtained under torture.
Human Rights Watch can also confirm that three criminal defence lawyers in private practice had been arbitrarily arrested and tortured in detention by Hamas security forces.
Gaza’s judiciary which consists of civil and military branches failed to hold to account security forces that operated outside the law or to uphold detainee’s rights in seven cases documented by HRW.
In cases examined by HRW, the military judiciary did not throw out any criminal cases against detainees because of due process violations. Any credible claims of torture by detainees were ignored or failed to be investigated by the military judiciary.
The intra-Palestinian political rivalry between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority is still the root cause of many abuses against detainees’ but there have been increasing reports of custodial abuse in Gaza against detainees accused on non-political crimes.
It is disappointing to say the least that the BBC has decided to disregard this information and rather, to afford Hamas a 'right of reply' which takes precedence over the main story. It is unfortunate that nearly 25 million people involuntarily subscribe to the BBC through the license fee and yet they are persistently and intentionally misled about the systematic abuse which is taking place by Hamas in Gaza. Does this correlate with the BBC’s editorial guidelines? I think not.
Human Rights Watch report condemns injustice towards civilians in Gaza under Hamas rule
Natalie Glanvill
A damning report was published on Wednesday by Human Rights Watch (HRW) documenting how Hamas ‘security services in Gaza routinely conduct arrests without routinely presenting warrants, refuse to promptly inform families of detainees’ whereabouts, deny detainees’ access to a lawyer and torture detainee’s in custody’.
Laws that uphold the basic rights of citizens are routinely broken because Hamas’ ‘security forces commonly arrest civilians and present them before Gaza’s military judiciary, even though its remit should be limited to military offenses’.
The importance of this story remains with nearly two million people living under Hamas rule who live in fear of torture, warrantless arrest and trials without conviction.
So why did the UK’s biggest broadcaster choose to help Hamas whitewash this story? It was picked up by most major news and broadcasting outlets but the state-funded ‘impartial’ BBC has overstepped the mark in attempting to 'balance' its coverage of the report, promoting the denialist response from a Hamas spokesperson at the front and centre of its coverage.
Over the past few years, the BBC’s political coverage of the Middle East has been criticised by many for not providing the detailed and accurate news that readers, listeners and viewers are entitled to.
The corporation has also been suspected of an anti-Israel bias, which has been in its reporting on the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Instead of a deep look into the report itself, followed by examples of the abuses, the BBC waits only until the third line of its article to quote Hamas Deputy Foreign Minister Ghazi Hamad, who said: "Maybe we have some violations from time to time, but it is not a widespread phenomenon."
While clinging onto the reins of power in Gaza, Hamas is far from a legitimately elected government. Following the elections in 2006, the terrorist group set out to consolidate its power by murdering opposition figures and ruling the strip with an iron fist. Elections were previously due in 2010 but have now been delayed indefinitely.
Despite this, the BBC affords Hamas not just equal airtime in response to the report, but puts the Hamas line front and centre of their debate and further broadcasting the interview with Hamad on another page on its website. Bizarrely, though the story has nothing to do with Israel, the BBC also links highly to a 'special report' on Israel and the Palestinians, directly under the headline, "Gazans face 'serious abuses' in criminal justice system".
To report this story in such a way is not only inaccurate and misleading, but lends legitimacy to the terrorist government in Gaza. The BBC is not new to reporting the region through its green-tinted glasses, either. So far this year, The Commentator has revealed that the BBC refused to acknowledge Israel had a capital city under the ‘key facts’ section of its Olympic page, that the corporation spent a whopping £332,780.47 on legal fees to conceal the Middle-East ‘Balen Report’ from the public, and that the corporation uses online pictures which convey the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a distorted way. On every one of these matters, the BBC has had to express its ‘regret’ – yet nothing changes.
Injustice in Gaza under Hamas
“After five years of Hamas rule in Gaza, the criminal justice system reeks of injustice, routinely violates detainee’s rights, and grants impunity to abusive security services”, says Human Rights Watch Middle East Director Joe Stark.
An individual case study of injustice brought against Abdel Karim Shrair highlights the significant abuse of human rights and illegal actions used by the al-Qassam brigades, the Internal Security Service, the judicial system of the Military courts and Hamas authorities.
Before Shrair was ‘sentenced to death and executed by firing squad in May 2011 for ‘collaborating with Israel’, he allegedly endured torture for three weeks before being transferred to police custody, warrantless arrest and incommunicado detention and severe injuries across face, arms, legs and chest. The charge that was brought against Shrair in part was on the basis of information that his lawyer alleged was obtained under torture.
Human Rights Watch can also confirm that three criminal defence lawyers in private practice had been arbitrarily arrested and tortured in detention by Hamas security forces.
Gaza’s judiciary which consists of civil and military branches failed to hold to account security forces that operated outside the law or to uphold detainee’s rights in seven cases documented by HRW.
In cases examined by HRW, the military judiciary did not throw out any criminal cases against detainees because of due process violations. Any credible claims of torture by detainees were ignored or failed to be investigated by the military judiciary.
The intra-Palestinian political rivalry between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority is still the root cause of many abuses against detainees’ but there have been increasing reports of custodial abuse in Gaza against detainees accused on non-political crimes.
It is disappointing to say the least that the BBC has decided to disregard this information and rather, to afford Hamas a 'right of reply' which takes precedence over the main story. It is unfortunate that nearly 25 million people involuntarily subscribe to the BBC through the license fee and yet they are persistently and intentionally misled about the systematic abuse which is taking place by Hamas in Gaza. Does this correlate with the BBC’s editorial guidelines? I think not.