Tag: UN submissions

Whose ABC? How Australia’s Public Broadcaster Failed Its Legal Obligations During Genocide

Whose ABC? How Australia’s Public Broadcaster Failed Its Legal Obligations During Genocide

State-funded broadcasters carry special obligations under international law that commercial outlets don‘t. When the World Court put states on notice of a plausible risk of genocide in Gaza, Australia’s public broadcaster should have reported it plainly. Instead, for over two years, it referred the word “genocide” upward; it humanised Israelis 1.58 times more than Palestinians; and it unlawfully sacked Antoinette Lattouf for sharing evidence of Israel’s crimes, then chose to spend over $2.6M in taxpayer money defending its surrender to the Israel lobby. Under cover of “impartiality”, this is how “our ABC” primed Australians to consent to complicity in genocide.

Anti-Palestine Bias in The Australian: Dehumanisation and Erasure as Editorial Policy

Anti-Palestine Bias in The Australian: Dehumanisation and Erasure as Editorial Policy

The Australian epitomises editorial complicity: it published a denial of deliberate starvation two weeks after leaked Israeli cabinet transcripts confirmed it was chosen as a strategy of war; it printed over 100 pro-Israel letters and none critical, as 300,000 Australians marched for humanity; and while it referenced Randa Abdel-Fattah in 412 articles, our research found 148 referencing Louise Adler, including 23 dedicated attack pieces, 17 alone in the fortnight of her Adelaide Writers’ Week resignation. John Lyons, its former Jerusalem correspondent, says only three people can tell its editors what to run: Rupert Murdoch, Lachlan Murdoch, and AIJAC’s Colin Rubenstein.

How Australian Newspapers Restricted Reporting on Israel’s Crimes in Gaza – with the blackout of the killing of Hind Rajab as a case study

How Australian Newspapers Restricted Reporting on Israel’s Crimes in Gaza – with the blackout of the killing of Hind Rajab as a case study

In November 2023, more than 270 Australian journalists signed an open letter calling for fairer Gaza coverage. Senior editors at Nine’s mastheads, all of whom had taken lobby-funded trips to Israel, banned signatories from covering the conflict. Two months later, an Israeli tank fired on an ambulance the army had cleared to reach six-year-old Hind Rajab, killing her and the paramedics. It made headlines worldwide — but across 2024, News Corp and Nine published no original reporting on it. This editorial blackout of verified atrocity crimes is a distinct mechanism of impunity, erasing the victims and enabling the perpetrators.

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