Showing posts with label Clive Coleman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clive Coleman. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Camp Bastion


As the previous post suggests, the BBC has been leading all day with the story of the Afghan 'insurgents' being detained by British forces at Camp Bastion, our largest base in Afghanistan. 

The BBC began the day by saying it had "seen legal documents" which lawyers acting for the detainees claim "could amount to unlawful detention", and which those self-same lawyers have been trying to compare to Guantanamo Bay. 

I could be wrong but the use of the passive tense by the BBC suggests to me that the corporation "saw" those legal documents thanks to those very lawyers giving them to them. The lawyers in question are are campaigning to free several dozen Afghans, all of whom are suspected of being of being actively involved with the Taleban and, thus, of posing a very real danger to our troops; some, indeed, of being directly responsible to the killing of British soldiers). Were it to be the case that the BBC "obtained" these legal documents from those lawyers it would show the corporation being extremely helpful to a campaign, especially were they to report it heavily.

And report it heavily they most certainly did. 

It was the main story on Today, whose angle on the story tallied closely with that of the lawyers:
Documents obtained by the BBC suggest British forces are detaining Afghan nationals at Camp Bastion in what could amount to unlawful detention.
Likewise, 5Live has been running with it heavily too:

  • BBC Radio 5 live / 29 May 2013
    The Defence Secretary says he hopes as many as 90 Afghan detainees, being held without charge at CampBastion, will be passed on to Afghan authorities…
  • BBC Radio 5 live / 29 May 2013
    Lawyers say more than 80 Afghan nationals are being unlawfully held without charge at Britain's CampBastion. Peter speaks to Dr Mohammed Daud…
  • BBC Radio 5 live / 29 May 2013
    Secretary Philip Hammond denies claims Britain is illegally holding dozens of Afghan prisoners in a secret detention centre at Camp Bastion. Ranulph…

The BBC World Service has also been 'airing our dirty washing in public' (so to speak) to the entire world:


...and the BBC News website has been full of items on the story today:

29 May 2013

You may say this is a scoop for the BBC, and they are right to go with it. 

That may well be, though it wouldn't be much of a scoop, would it, if it has merely been handed to them on a plate by some campaigning lawyers; indeed, that would look pretty bad. It would look as if they were acting as a mouthpiece for these campaigning lawyers. I would not be happy with that - were it to turn out to be the case. 

The main report on the website, by Dominic Casciani and Clive Coleman, was - most usually - open for comments. Unfortunately for the BBC, the comments didn't go their way, and after a mere seven comments they 'closed' them down.

I think you can see why: 

  • 7.

     
    Phil Shiner, lawyer for eight of the men needs to use his time in a more patriotic manner.

    There are thousands of cases of injustice in the UK he could otherwise devote his time to.

    Maybe reward has something to do with it?

    IMO he should be made personally responsible for any subsequent 'terrorist' actions by his 'clients' if they were prematurely released due to his involvement.
  • +1

    Comment number6.

     
    here we go again the BBC strike again gutter news i wouldn`t be surprised if its all a pack of lies.i will never again watch any BBC tv channel.like has been said who needs enemies when we have the good old BBC who only report what they want or the government tell them to.
  • +3

    Comment number5.

     
    So what if they are, they're obviously being held for a reason, contrary to what 'extremists' think we don't kill/capture innocent women and children, it's men of 'fighting age' who have been caught in the act we detain.
  • +3

    Comment number4.

     
    With friends like the BBC who needs enemies!? Honestly, with all the tensions around at the moment you open this story up to HYS. Ludicrous. Here's a better suggestion (from your very own website!) for a story to get people talking positively:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-york-north-yorkshire-22689552

    Guess this isn't sensationalist to open up for conversation.
  • +3

    Comment number3.

     
    Why does the media and our Government give such public news!? Much of the unrest in our country and the world are due to the media and governments. Just shut up!!!!
  • +4

    Comment number2.

     
    who needs enemies within..... we've got the BBC.

    One day you might report on what the enemy is doing to our boys!
  • -1

    Comment number1.

     
    Imprisonment by foreigners on your own land. To be forced to leave your wife and baby at 20 years old. These are the tragic yet deserved consequences of killing innocents and people seeking peace. I say "peace" with caution, as there exist two types of western forces in Afghanistan and countries similar to it: those who kill to spread peace in the long run, and those who kill for the hell of it.
Except for the first comment there, those comments reflect what I suspect many a BBC reader, viewer and listener must have been thinking today. 

They suggest a number of things that bother many critics of the BBC - the idea that the BBC is unpatriotic, that it undermines our troops and our war effort, that it gives an over-sympathetic ear to our enemies, that it is over-sensitive to the rights of Muslim terrorists and the views of left-wing campaigners and, above all, that it doesn't care anywhere near enough for the safety of British soldiers - many of whose lives may be endangered by these very men after their release and who might now be facing a savage backlash as a result of today's negative reporting (and we're all now painfully aware how real that danger is). 

The BBC that broadcast Frankie’s Story and The Undercover Soldier to the horror of many in the army, has form here, some might well say. 

The question you sometimes see on websites, summing this up, is "Whose side is the BBC on?" 

The BBC would surely say it's trying to be on no one's side, merely to report the news impartially. 

Many people are uncomfortable with the BBC adopting such a position when British forces are involved in an armed conflict. 

If you've not been following the story, the MoD has argued that the number of detainees is higher than usual only because of difficulties in handed them over to the Afghan authorities and that the number is usually closer to 20 people. Fears for the mistreatment of prisoners by the Afghan authorities led to the transfer process being put on hold. The MoD also rubbishes the lawyers' claim that Camp Bastion is a "secret facility". The Defence Secretary had already informed parliament about the detentions. He has also reaffirmed they were vital to the protection of our troops.

The New York Times provides a noticeably more sympathetic account of the British position than the British Broadcasting Corporation's account, noting in the light of Philip Hammond's comments:
That is a similar point posed by American officials involved in long negotiations with the Afghan government over the transfer of Afghan detainees out of the American detention center at the Bagram Air Base, north of Kabul. The issue became a major sticking point in recent months after several failed attempts to hand over control of the prison, with Mr. Karzai demanding immediate and full Afghan sovereignty over the prison and American officials seeking to ensure that hardened militant leaders would not be immediately released back onto the battlefield.
The BBC article features, on the other hand, contains such things as this:
One, a teenager, has been held for 14 months, while the other, a 20-year-old father, has been held for 12 months.
Was the word "father" really necessary in that sentence? Why was it included? To show "the humanity of the Taleban" (as Lyse Doucet might say) and tug at the heart-strings a little?

I haven't listened closely to today's coverage on Radio 4 yet. That will have to wait for another day. 

Sunday, 28 October 2012

'Today' II: The inquest continues...


Continuing to probe the truth of that comment on the Biased BBC website (see previous post)and having laid out plenty of I what I believe to be good evidence that the programme's coverage of the food labelling issue was fundamentally biased - conducting full-length interviews with supporters of the new scheme only, asking questions largely from the campaigners' side of the argument, interviewing campaigners in a far gentler way than (say) the business guest, largely ignoring some concerns (those of potentially adversely-hit businesses)  and completely ignoring more general attitudes that are sceptical about such schemes in principle - I'll now move on to the second item in that hour of Today (24/10/2012).  At the end of the previous post, I  wrote "Time to move on to the next issue. Surely it can't have been slanted towards the standpoint of campaigners too?" There's only one way to find out...


Deaths in prisons and young offender institutions

Here's how James Naughtie introduced this segment:

"200 children and young people under the age of 24 have died in prison or young offender institutions in England and Wales over the last ten years. Most of them, the vast majority, committed suicide. They were "a devastating indictment of bad practice", according to the former Chief Inspector of Prisons,  Lord Ramsbotham, in a report for the Prison Reform Trust and the charity Inquest. Yvonne Bailey is the mother of Joseph Scholes, who died aged 16 in custody in 2002. She describes what happened."

[Yvonne Bailey, describing her son and criticising his death in custody.]

"Ten years have passed since her son's death. Did she believe that lessons had been learned by the authorities?"

[Yvonne Bailey, saying 'No', and continuing her criticism, talking of a cover-up, calling for a full public inquiry and attacking the government for their failure to act on the evidence].

"Well, that was Yvonne Bailey, whose son Joseph Scholes died at the age of 16."

Such emotionally-charged testimony from a bereaved and angry mother calls for an interview in response from those being criticised. It didn't get it. Instead, we got a campaigner from the Inquest charity who, as you would expect, shares and went on to amplify Yvonne Bailey's point of view. It was, of course, perfectly reasonable for someone from Inquest or the Prison Reform Trust to have been interviewed but, surely, they shouldn't have been the only people interviewed after Yvonne Bailey? 

Here's how the interview went:

"Deborah Coles in co-director of the Inquest charity. It is a fairly startling figure, this figure of 200, isn't it?"

[Deborah: "It's a deeply shocking figure". They all died in the care of the state - the most extreme of society's failing of the "troubled, vulnerable and disadvantaged children".]

"What do you think can be done?"

[Deborah: Evidence shows many of them have significant problems and needs "dramatic response from government" - how major rethink of how children are treated and "use prison in the most sparing of circumstances". Never been a public inquiry or review. Community punishment would be more effective.]


Deborah Coles

"The Ministry of Justice have issued a statement saying that 'Young people in custody are some of the most vulnerable and troubled individuals in society and their safety is a priority. Strenuous efforts,' it says, 'are made to learn from each death and improve our understanding of procedures for caring for prisoners.' Do you believe that?"

[Deborah: Unfortunately statistics tell another story. More deaths this year. Serious problems with inquest system. We're calling for an independent review.]

"Deborah Coles from the charity Inquest, thank you very much." 

As you will have noticed, the generally sympathetic Jim did quote a government response before asking Deborah Coles if she believed it - not that anyone will a brain cell to rub together would have failed to guess in advance what her response to that would be. (No, she doesn't believe it). So that's a small tick in the 'Impartiality' box to balance the overall heavy weighting of the segment towards the campaigners. 

And Inquest are a campaign group. James Naughtie called them a 'charity' three times. Not once did he call them a 'campaign group' or 'pressure group'. They are a registered charity, so technically Jim was correct; however, they are surely better described (when discussing this kind of story) as a 'campaign group' -  just as Sky, the Daily Mirror, the Independent, the Morning Star, the Daily Mail, the Guardian, Channel 4 News, the Huffington Post...and the BBC (among others) frequently describe them. The Prison Reform Trust, for that matter, is also a 'campaign group'. By not labelling them both as such, did Jim risk a misunderstanding on the part of his listeners as to what kinds of organisation were behind his report? Might listeners not assume that they are merely charities and independent bodies rather than active campaigners for prison reform and community sentencing? A report from a pair of liberal campaign groups, even when carried out by someone so well-regarded as Lord Ramsbotham, is not an official report and every step should be taken by a reporter to make sure that no listeners are left in any doubt of this.

The subject was rehearsed during the first hour of the programme when Sarah Montague discussed the report with the BBC's Clive Coleman. The discussion began:

Sarah: "The Prison Reform Trust and the charity Inquest are calling for an independent review into the deaths of children and young people in custody. Clive Coleman is our legal correspondent. Clive, it's not something one hears about terribly often. What sort of scale of problem is it?"

Clive:  "Well, the figures are really quite shocking..."

Clive then outlined the findings of the report, without either critiquing it (which is surely possible?) or providing any responses from those criticised. So, the report got a clear run and some support from the BBC reporter. Would it have got such favourable coverage if it had been a report from a victims' group or a right-wing organisation calling for tougher sentences? (Would it have got any coverage?) 


Moving on...


Argos/Homebase profits fall

At 7.21 it was Business News, with Simon Jack interviewing Terry Duddy, Chief Executive of the Argos/Homebase group, which has seen a fall in profits. As such interviews often seem to go, it began with a less than helpful question (to the businessman being interviewed): "The business model at Argos is broken, isn't it?" A lot more tough challenging and interrupting followed, with Mr. Duddy arguing back. It didn't get quite as heated as the exchange between James Naughtie and the lady from ASDA in the next hour but it was a feisty encounter nonetheless. I had to smile when he got a "Best of luck with that!" from Simon at the very end!

Crazy Working Mom

At 7.25  (before the Sports News) came a feature that could hardly be claimed to be 'hard left' in orientation, as it wasn't a political story - an interview described on the BBC website as followed:

A Canadian mother Jessica Stilwell was so angry at picking up after her daughters that she and her husband went on strike and wrote a blog about it called "Crazy Working Mom: Diary of a mother on the brink of snapping!". She tells Today presenter Sarah Montague what made her do it.

You'd have to really stretch things to incredibility to say it's a piece showing the benefits of striking [as their strike worked!] and, thus,  Gramscian propaganda at its most subtle!

Moving on again....to the next post....