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How the BBC (and others) fell for yet another Hamas narrative

Western media rushed to run with unsubstantiated claims of Israeli attacks on Palestinian civilians – relying on ‘Gaza authorities’ and ignoring countervailing evidence

June 4, 2025 16:27
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Broadcasting House, the BBC headquarters in London (Image: Getty)
4 min read

If members of the BBC’s funding public assumed that the corporation had learned something about jumping to conclusions before the facts surrounding reported incidents become clear following its finger-scorching coverage of the October 2023 Al Ahli hospital explosion, they would be wrong.

Early on the morning of June 1st the BBC News website published a report headlined “At least 15 killed in Israeli tank fire near Gaza aid centre, say medics”. It was credited to a "local Gaza journalist" and went on to quote a "doctor at the Red Cross field hospital” and “Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal”, while failing to inform readers that Hamas runs that organisation.

As the day went on, the BBC's report was updated numerous times, with the claim that the civilians were hit by "tank" fire removed, and the number of alleged casualties in its headline fluctuating from fifteen to twenty-six to thirty-one and then down to twenty-one. Its cited source of those figures changed three times from “medics” to “Hamas” and then “the Red Cross”. The fourth version told BBC audiences that, "The Israel Defence Forces said it was ‘currently unaware of injuries caused by IDF fire within the Humanitarian Aid distribution site. The matter is still under review.’”

In other words, the BBC chose to promote unsubstantiated claims before it had received any information from either the IDF or the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.