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Opinion

Channel 4’s ‘Gaza: Doctors under attack’ is an assault on journalism

Billed as a ‘forensic investigation’, the documentary is a typical piece of activism journalism, filled with elusions and incomplete truths wrapped in the ponderous score of a horror film

July 8, 2025 12:31
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The surgery wing of al-Shifa hospital in Gaza (Image: Channel 4/Basement Films)
3 min read

The documentary Gaza: Doctors Under Attack was not aired by the BBC, which commissioned it. “Broadcasting this material risked creating a perception of partiality that would not meet the high standards that the public rightly expect of the BBC," it said. This caution is wise: the BBC documentary Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone, was narrated by the son of Hamas’s former deputy minister of agriculture, so it was not exactly objective. Then it aired the cry “Death to the IDF” from the Glastonbury stage, which was worse.

Ramita Navai, the reporter of Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, told BBC Radio 4’s Today that Israel is, “a rogue state that is committing war crimes and ethnic cleansing and mass murdering Palestinians”. That is not objectivity either: I would argue it is a short segue from rogue to illegitimate, and a journalist who thinks Israel is illegitimate has no business reporting on it. They should stick to X.

Instead of the BBC, it was Channel 4 that aired Gaza: Doctors Under Attack last week, billed as “forensic investigation.” In reality, it is a typical piece of activist journalism, shocking to watch, and yet filled with elusions. It tells incomplete truths wrapped in the ponderous score of a horror film.

It does the Palestinian cause no service. Within its elusions, Hamas and its murderous intent towards Israelis and Gazans – the original victims of its barbarism – are barely mentioned. The cause of Palestine could thus be dismissed as belonging to extremists, and thus unworthy of support. This is wrong. Half-truths serve no one, and this conflict, refracted into culture wars a world away, is filled with them.

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