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Social media comments on Israel by some journalists ‘unacceptable’ says BBC boss

BBC Director-General Tim Davie has said social media remarks about the Israel-Gaza war by some of the corporation’s journalists were ‘unacceptable’ (Jacob King/PA)
BBC Director-General Tim Davie has said social media remarks about the Israel-Gaza war by some of the corporation’s journalists were ‘unacceptable’ (Jacob King/PA)

BBC Director-General Tim Davie has branded social media remarks about the Israel-Gaza war by some of the corporation’s journalists “unacceptable”.

However, he told the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Wednesday that the BBC remains “impartial”.

His comments came after Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer recently said she believes the broadcaster is biased “on occasion”.

Mr Davie told MPs on the committee he is “proud of our output under huge pressure”.

He added that the BBC is able to “steer the course amongst the noise” despite “the storms of social media” being “very demanding”.

Culture, Media and Sport Committee
BBC chief operating officer Leigh Tavaziva, Director-General Tim Davie director-general and editorial policy and standards director David Jordan director appear before the Culture, Media and Sport Committee (House of Commons/UK Parliament/PA)

However, he also said he “worries” about public institutions losing trust in the current social climate.

“I believe we are impartial and we’re doing a good job, but I do not want for a minute to be defensive or complacent about that. I think there’s lots of work to do.”

Mr Davie was also asked about BBC Arabic staff retweeting remarks that are “essentially pro-Hamas”

He replied: “Some of those tweets that we’ve seen are unacceptable, and we have taken action and we’ll continue to take action; whether I can convince you that it will never happen again… of course not.

“We are robust and I think we’re doing the fair thing, we’re acting fairly and judiciously and it’s not easy.

“I mean, you’re seeing it around the world, every news organisation, every cultural institution as you know is under enormous pressure… this is enormously fraught.”

He said “social media activity with regard to this issue” has led to many BBC staff facing “threats” and has caused some to leave.

Mr Davie was also asked about the BBC’s reporting of a submission to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) by South Africa alleging that Israel breached the Genocide Convention with its military offensive against Hamas.

He said he gets “significant feedback from either side”, and added: “Overall I think we have been pretty robust in covering the ICJ rulings. We’ve been in a reasonable position.”

BBC director of editorial policy and standards David Jordan told the committee that South Africa and Israel’s submissions receiving different amounts of coverage on different days “only happened on our UK output”, due to the need to cover a hearing about the Post Office scandal.

“When News looked at it in retrospect, they did think that perhaps they did make a mistake by not making the two live coverages similar or the same, but all the other coverage was similar or the same,” he said.

Mr Jordan added that an update to editorial guidelines will be available for publication “hopefully before the general election”.

Israel has denied the accusations by South Africa saying they are “wholly unfounded in fact and law, morally repugnant, and represent an abuse both of the Genocide Convention and of the court itself” in court documents.

New guidance on social media for BBC employees was published in September, which said they must not bring the corporation “into disrepute” and are required to be respectful in public.