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PCC rules no breach over Steve Bell Gaza cartoon

December 19, 2012 10:51

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

The Press Complaints Commission has ruled that it is unable to take further the matter of a controversial cartoon about Israel and Gaza published in the Guardian last month.

Steve Bell's drawing, featuring Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu as a puppet-master pulling the strings of Western leaders, attracted allegations that it applied antisemitic tropes.

Twenty two people registered objections with the PCC on the grounds of accuracy and discrimination, but the watchdog has now considered the complaint and decided that there was no breach of the editor's code of practice. In a statement, the PCC acknowledged that many complainants found Mr Bell's image offensive, but added that the body did not address "issues of taste and offence" as it was not a "moral arbiter".

"The complainants considered the use of Jewish religious symbols, as well as the depiction of a prominent Jewish person as a puppeteer, made the cartoon antisemitic, offensive and prejudicial toward Jewish people," explained the PCC in its assessment of the cartoon. "Some complainants also felt the cartoon mirrored Nazi propaganda, with its themes of Jewish control and domination of world affairs."

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