
The BBC says it has decided not to broadcast a documentary about doctors who work in Gaza, because of the concerns that no prejudice has been around production.
Gaza: Doctors under attack were ordered by the BBC but made by an independent production company. It was originally scheduled for broadcasting in February, but it has not been carried in any BBC outlet.
In a statement, the BBC says it is “determined to report all aspects of conflict in the middle east without prejudice and fair”.
BBC News Contacts Profession Company ProDding films for comment. The promoter Ben de Pear was previously last week BBC has “completely failed” and those journalists “silenced and silenced”.
The BBC says it is “transferred to the film material in the films in the basement”.
BBC News understood the Shleck Documentary removed on Thursday, following the Gaffield Documentary Program, showing the Documentary Program in Sheffield, showing the Documentary Program in the Documentary in the Documentary in Sheffield Sheffield, showing the Geffield Diest Program, showing the Geffield Diest Program, currently Sheffield Program in Sheffield on Rabia Navai
A different documentary, Gaza: How to survive a warzone, is pulled out of IPlayer early this year After it appeared that 13-year-olds were the son of an officer in a Hamas.
Gaza: Doctors who are attacked – Gaza also known: Medical fire-said Palestinian medical medical experiences work during Gaza.
The film was ordered by Karim Shah, Navai and De Pear, a former Channel Editor 4 News.
In a statement Friday, the BBC said it was ordered by the documentary in the past one year, but stopped in April film while a review of a Gaza documentary continues “.
“With films from independent production companies, and both of Gaza, correctly wait for any relevant findings – and put it in action – before the broadcast of film broadcast.
“However, we want to hear the doctors’ voices. Our goal is to find a way to set up some materials in our prejudice programs, before the examination is published.
“For several weeks, BBC works in basement films to find a way to tell the doctors’ stories on our platforms.
“Yesterday (Thursday), it became apparent that we have reached the end of the road with these discussions. We have come to the conclusion that broadcasting this material risked creating a perception of partiality that would not meet the high standards that the public rightly expect of the BBC.”
Added to the corporation, as opposed to some reports, the documentary “Unable to take the last pre-broadcast BBC sign-off processes not a movie of BBC.”
It goes on: “We want to thank the doctors and contributors and we are sad that we cannot speak their stories. The BBC will continue to cover Gaza events without prejudice.”
Referring to the sheffield’s documentation on Thursday, before the decision was announced, detail blaming Dear Director General Tim Davie for refusing film air.
“All decisions about our film were not taken by journalists, Tim Davie took them,” he said while joining a panel, as reported on broadcast.
“He’s only a PR person. Tim Davie takes the editorial decisions, straightforward, he cannot do.”
He added: “The BBC’s primary purpose is TV News and current activities, and if it fails it does not matter what an institution it should be new management.
“Someone needs to happen because decisions are making decisions from a defensive point of view instead of a journistic on a journistic basis that you can protect it, but if you do it on the basis of the journalist,
In connection with the war, Dear claiming BBC staff “is forced to use the language they do not know, they do not describe something obvious (for fear of prejudice) and it is sad”.
Reply to de Pear’s comments, a BBC spokesman that the BBC says “fully rejected this attitude toward our scope”.
“The BBC often produces strong journalism about this conflict. With the revolutionary life of the life of the life of the life of the life of the Palestinian life of the Bunters in Gaza, and Gaza 101. “
High-profile numbers such as actress Susan Sarandon and Preerson Gary Takerer have previously accused of corporation to censor the delay.
An open letter, also signed by cultural numbers such as Dame Harrietes Walter, Maniem Peake, Juliet Stevenson and Mike Leighs, said: “This is political control.”
“No news organization should decide behind closed doors whose stories are saying,” it goes on.
“This important film should be found in public, and the courage of those who contributed it is honored.”