Become a Member
The Jewish Chronicle

For a media award, just ‘monitor’ Israel

Surprise, surprise. It’s the Israeli NGO investigating ‘shocking abuse by settlers’ that gets the prizes

June 25, 2009 12:12

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

2 min read

It is a tribute to Israel’s vibrant democracy that groups like B’Tselem, the Israeli NGO which monitors human rights abuses in the occupied territories, flourish. Reports from the group have dealt with issues including torture, fatal shootings by security forces, expropriation of land and discrimination in planning decisions in East Jerusalem, as well as house demolitions and violence by Israeli settlers.

How hard it would be to imagine a Palestinian non-governmental organisation which monitored the human rights abuses of Hamas with such rigour? There was scant recognition of how Fatah supporters were dragged from their hospital beds during the recent Gaza war and shot. Similarly, it would be hard to envisage a muscular Iranian human rights group monitoring the brutality of government-controlled militias in the wake of disputed elections and bringing them to the attention of Tehran’s leaders.

Yet there is something unsettling about B’Tselem. After all, there are no shortage of NGOs in the Middle East which rush to judge Israeli actions. While no one wants to see the alleged abuses uncovered by B’Tselem brushed under the carpet, one cannot but think that some of its work is detrimental to the Jewish state.

One sure sign of this is the warm embrace that its activities receive in our own press. In the last week, the group was honoured with a “Special Award” at the “One World Media Awards” in London. It won the prize for an “outstanding media” enterprise under which B’Tselem provided video cameras to 160 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. A report in Guardian Media said: “the project has produced shocking footage of abuse by Israeli troops and settlers”.