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The Jewish Chronicle

Trusting the BBC just a little bit more

In criticising Jeremy Bowen, the BBC Trust took a big step towards maintaining impartiality

April 30, 2009 10:17

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

2 min read

There has been a great deal of triumphalism on the web and in print at the criticism levelled at BBC Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen by the guardians of impartiality on the BBC Trust. Certainly, it is encouraging that the BBC Trust is taking its regulatory role more seriously.

In the pre-Hutton era, BBC governors saw their role as defending management and editorial from outside interference. Now it has shown it deals with complaints carefully and is determined to maintain journalistic standards.

The real case against Bowen is that, as Middle East editor, he has a blurred mission — as both reporter and editor. When he was appointed in June 2005, it was as a direct response to complaints over the coverage of the second Intifada and in particular the Middle East reporting of Orla Guerin and Barbara Plett. The BBC has now moved both to other regions and despite occasional slippage it is doing better in enforcing impartiality.

As an “editor” Bowen is more than a reporter. He is an expert on the ground, the person the anchor looks to when wanting a judgement about an issue. It is this muddle — the conflict between reporter and opinion former — which has turned Bowen into a target of the critics. He is not alone. Other BBC editors in unrelated fields, including the formidable Robert Peston, face a similar challenge.