BBC Happy to Report About ISIS — Unless Target Is Israel
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by Hadar Sela

An ISIS video shows a man wearing a yellow jumpsuit kneeling in the desert before a knife-wielding masked man in military fatigues. Photo: Screenshot.
Given the BBC’s longstanding — but recently intensified — preoccupation with ISIS, and considering that on October 25, the British media outlet published a report titled “‘Israeli Arab paraglider’ sparks Syria border operation,” it was surprising to see that the BBC chose to ignore the follow-up story to the incident portrayed in that article.
On November 18, the Israeli security services released a statement concerning the indictment of members of a cell of ISIS sympathizers from Jaljulia.
Security forces services recently busted a group of six Israeli Arab men who planned to travel to Syria with the intention of fighting alongside the radical Islamic State group. A seventh member of the group succeeded in flying across the Israel-Syrian border on the Golan Heights on a hang glider last month.
In a statement Wednesday, the Shin Bet security service said the six suspects, all residents of the northern Israeli-Arab town of Jaljulia, had been planning for months to make their way to Syria. […]
The seventh member of the group, Nadal Hamad Salah Salah, 23, flew a hang glider across the border from the Golan Heights and into Syria on October 24, setting off an intensive investigation by security services.
As a result of the initial investigation, later the same evening two brothers were arrested, Jihad Nadal Yousef Hagala, 26 and Ahab Nadal Yousel Hagala, 22.
The brothers were known to police as supporters of the Islamic State group, the Shin Bet said. The elder brother, Jihad, spent six months in Syria in 2013 fighting with IS and was arrested after his return to Israel. He was tried, sentenced to prison, and released in November 2014.
During the investigation, it emerged that the brothers had helped Salah to make his exit to Syria to join IS, the indictment said. In recent months Salah had allegedly agreed with Jihad Nadal Yousef Hagala to use hang gliders to get to Syria. The pair planned to glide over the border because Hagala was concerned that, due to his history, he would be flagged and stopped by Israeli security if he tried flying out of Ben Gurion Airport on a commercial flight.
Notably, the BBC also refrained from reporting on a previous story concerning an ISIS cell in northern Israel, which came to light at the beginning of October.
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