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January 12, 2004

The BBC's dhimmi double standard

"The BBC was accused last night of operating double standards over its suspension of Robert Kilroy-Silk for his comments about Arabs while it continues to use a contributor who has called for Israelis to be killed." This from the Telegraph, with thanks to filtrat.

"Tom Paulin, the poet and Oxford don, has continued to be a regular contributor to BBC2's Newsnight Review arts programme, despite being quoted in an Egyptian newspaper as saying that Jews living in the Israeli-occupied territories were 'Nazis' who should be 'shot dead'. Andrew Dismore, the Labour MP, said he found it hard to understand why the BBC had moved against Mr Kilroy-Silk but had not taken any action against Mr Paulin.

"'I am not defending anything Mr Kilroy-Silk has said, but I was greatly upset by what Mr Paulin said, and I think the rules should apply to people equally,' said Mr Dismore. 'Mr Paulin said awful things about Israel and Jewish people. He should have been kept off BBC screens while his own comments were investigated. I was surprised that that did not happen. It smacks of double standards on the part of the BBC.'

"Mr Paulin made his comments in the Egyptian weekly newspaper Al-Ahram almost two years ago, saying that US-born settlers in the occupied territories should be shot dead. 'I think they are Nazis, racists. I feel nothing but hatred for them,' he said, adding: 'I never believed that Israel had the right to exist at all.'

"Within days of the article appearing, a number of academic institutions, including Harvard, cancelled planned readings by the poet. The BBC, however, did not seek to remove him from Newsnight Review. Mr Paulin subsequently denied accusations of anti-Semitism.

"By contrast, Mr Kilroy-Silk, a former Labour MP, was suspended by the BBC on Friday, five days after he wrote an article in the Sunday Express. He described Arabs as 'suicide bombers, limb amputators and women repressors', and said they contributed nothing useful to the world — comments that outraged race campaigners and some Muslims and for which he later apologised.

"The corporation said it was suspending his BBC1 weekday morning chat show, Kilroy, until it had 'investigated the matter fully'.

"A number of MPs criticised the decisions yesterday, accusing the BBC of censorship. Richard Shepherd, a Tory MP who has been a friend of Mr Kilroy-Silk since their student days at the London School of Economics, urged the BBC to draw a line under the affair now that broadcaster had publicly apologised. 'Robert is a decent and honourable person with a passionate belief in the values of free speech,' said Mr Shepherd. 'He's also a polemicist and he raises issues that matter to him and are well within our national concept of freedom of expression. It is important to remember that we are a free society because we have free speech. What is happening to Britain? There was a time when things like this would be shrugged off. I think the reaction to the column brings into disrepute some major organisations: the BBC, the Commission for Racial Equality, which all felt the need to complain, and the Metropolitan Police, which feels the need to investigate.'

"Ann Widdecombe, the former Conservative home office minister, said Mr Kilroy-Silk had been unfortunate in his use of language, but she insisted that the BBC had no right to censor free speech. 'There is no doubt that some of his phraseology is over the top. You cannot say we owe the Arabs nothing. We owe them a great deal in terms of our prosperity,' she said. 'But I do agree with some of the other points he made. It's quite reasonable for him to voice his opinions on the treatment of women and practices such as the severing of limbs. It is quite proper to speak out against such practices. I think that the BBC has crossed the line and engaged in active censorship. The key point to remember is that he did not make these comments on a BBC programme and that we have a law in this country that can deal with comments likely to stir up racial hatred. This is not an issue for the BBC.'

"Gerald Kaufman, the Labour chairman of the Commons culture, media and sport committee, said that while he could not support the comments made by Mr Kilroy-Silk, he felt that the ex-MP was being made a scapegoat by a BBC desperate to prove its piety. He said: 'The BBC has been found lacking again in the way it approaches its responsibilities as a public service broadcaster. The action taken has less to do with the column itself and more to do with the fallout from the Hutton inquiry. They are in a rush to demonstrate their own piety. They should have made it clear to people long ago that they can be BBC personalities or journalists - but not both.'

"Others, however, refused to support the ex-MP. Robert Marshall-Andrews, the Labour MP, said: 'I think it is the most loathsome and illiterate article I have ever read in a British newspaper. The only conceivable purpose is to create ignorance and prejudice. I, and people in my section of the Labour Party, hope that Tony Blair will realise that we must not accept any more support from Richard Desmond, the proprietor of the Express. It may well be bordering on criminality.'

"A BBC official said the corporation was examining Mr Kilroy-Silk's case on its own merits and did not want to be drawn into making comparisons with Mr Paulin. She admitted that it was unclear whether the broadcaster's column in the Sunday Express had been subjected to regular BBC vetting. 'That is why we are having an investigation,' she said."

Meanwhile, Kilroy-Silk himself has a few words for the BBC. According to CNN, "British talkshow host Robert Kilroy-Silk has hit out at the BBC for not supporting him in a row over an article in which he called Arabs 'suicide bombers, limb-amputators, women repressors.'

"The BBC has axed his morning half-hour show pending an inquiry but Kilroy-Silk accused his bosses of 'giving way' to a lobby demanding his resignation. He said he had hoped the corporation would have 'kept the programme going and dealt with the criticisms.' . . .

"The head of the Commission for Racial Equality Monday accused Kilroy-Silk of posing as a '24-carat martyr' and called for him to issue an apology for his article. CRE chairman Trevor Phillips told the UK's Press Association he did not believe the BBC presenter was a racist, but that he was risking his reputation by trying to 'defend the indefensible.' He said Kilroy-Silk should 'learn something about Muslims and Arabs' and use some of his 'vast earnings' to support a Muslim charity as recompense for his remarks. Britain is home to about 1.8 million Muslims, many of them second and third generation descendants of immigrants from Britain's former colonies.

"Kilroy-Silk, whose daytime chat show has 1.2 million viewers, has expressed 'very deep regret' over the 'great distress and offence' the column had clearly caused. . . . Amid a welter of mainly hostile media comment, Kilroy-Silk defended himself in an interview with this week's Sunday Telegraph newspaper, asserting his right to speak his mind.

"'If I am not allowed to say that there are Arab states that are evil, despotic and treat women abominably, if I am not allowed to say that, which I know to be a fact, then what can I say?'

"The decision by the publicly funded BBC, which is trying to protect its reputation for impartiality by stopping staff from writing controversial freelance articles, to suspend Kilroy-Silk's show has itself drawn criticism. 'Our tradition of free speech is precious and we shouldn't lose sight of that,' said Tory opposition leader Michael Howard."

Posted by Robert at January 12, 2004 9:02 AM
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Comments
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Talk about art imitating life! As a Christian preacher [Methodist Church] I have been castigated on more than one occasion for remarks I have made criticising Muslims for their barbaric punishments of offenders against Sharia law.

As to the suggestion made by Trevor Philips that Kilroy should donate some of his earnings to a Muslim charity - we can be fairly sure where that would end up - in the pockets of the terrorists.

Posted by: Gerry at January 12, 2004 1:42 PM

Kilroy-Silk has been victimized by the lack of Brit constitutional free speech guarantees under the UK's unwritten constitution. Add to that the BBC's fawning acceptance of multiculturalism, including Islamic dhimmitude. What makes this whole episode truly toxic is the acceptance of the absurd anti-semitic and pro Islamist positions of Irish poet Tom Paulin. Now, we in the US know who and what Paulin stands for given his sabbatical at my alma mater Columbia and his infamous "lecture" at the Harvard English department during the academic year in 2002. I like to use the analogy of the American poet Ezra Pound, who engaged in similar anti-semitic caterwauling for Benito Mussolino in fascist Italy during WWII. Upon capture by American forces advancing up the Italian boot he was sentenced as a traitor and spent a few years in a mental ward at St. Elizabeth's in Washington, DC. Some believe this was a violation of Pound's free speech rights under our constitution in the US. No one has suggested anything of the sort for Tom Paulin. But in the case of former Labor MP Kilroy-Silk the BBC and legal authorities in the UK want to prosecute him for hate speech-some of which, quite frankly is spot on.

As I said in an email that I sent around when the Daily Telegraph report first surfaced this weekend maybe the anti-dhimmitude "underground in the UK should take a cue from the famous GI grafitti of World War II and splash "Kilroy was here" across the gates of Buckingham Palace, 10 Downing Street and Broadcast House in London.

Sure looks like EUrabia triumphant to this observer in the UK and at the BBC.

Posted by: Jerry Gordon at January 12, 2004 7:21 PM

This is my letter to the Guardian,to one Brian Whitaker, wrote one to BBC, no copy.
Arabs are Arabs, what Kilroy said is true. I am a Malaysian. In two East Coast states ruled by an Islamist party, or rather ruled by Wannabe Arabs, the Arab influence is indeed resounding. There, they want to amputate limbs, stone women, cover up women, impose their values on Non-Muslims. In Saudi Arabia, they do that, honour killings occur in most Arab countries. Ask the Arabs in Britain whether they have free speech in their countriess of origin, why on earth is it they who ran away from their countries want the same in Britain ?

They are Muslims first and British citizens second. Remember they conducted suicide bombings in Israel and Iraq. Why is there denial ? These resident Ayahtollahs should not be entertained.
The Non-Muslims in Malaysia are an oppressed lot. Tell me whether there is freedom of religion in Arab countries. If there is, then my grandmother is still a virgin. Their faith itsef is very racist in nature. Oh, you pathetically politically correct people, you are soon going to overwhelmed with this same people whom you are trying to sound tolerant to. They are not. Here are verses from their Koran, which is Saudi Arabian nationalism, which actually preaches hatred.

http://rationalthinking.humanists.net/janus_face_of_islam.htm The Janus Face of Islam written by a Muslim tells the truth. Brian I would advise you to read, stop being a Dhimmi, in your own land.
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-yeor080202.asp Read alot Brian, read how racist the Arabs are before you start pointing fingers at your own. You don't know what is racism, Here in Malaysia it is an everyday occurence. Racism is actually legalized, they call it affirmative action,new economic policy, restructuring society and many other names covering up an apartheid policy, sanctioned by the government. Racism is by nature taught and indoctrinated from young in Muslim and Arab societies. Be thankful for people like Kiroy who tell the truth. I also have views on Arabs in my blog http://malaysiatoday.blogspot.com Feel free to contact me anytime.
Regards
Eric Mudasi

Posted by: ericmudasi at January 12, 2004 10:50 PM

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