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August 3, 2016 6:56 am
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BBC Whitewashes Terror in Re-run of Palestinian Teacher Story

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avatar by Hadar Sela

PA President Mahmoud Abbas, addressing the EU in Brussels. Photo: Screenshot.

PA President Mahmoud Abbas, addressing the EU in Brussels. Photo: Screenshot.

When the BBC reported back in March on a prize-winning Palestinian teacher, it managed to omit some relevant information from the story. Over four months later, the BBC chose to return to that topic with a report from the Jerusalem bureau’s Yolande Knell, which was aired (from 41:07 here) on the July 29 edition of the BBC Radio 4 program “PM.”

This time audiences were told — albeit very briefly and belatedly — about the teachers’ strike that Knell and her colleagues had previously ignored.

Back in March, there were angry scenes during a four-week walk-out over pay. Monthly salaries here are just 430 to 600 dollars; that’s less than many other public workers. Schools are badly under-resourced.

Predictably, Knell did not bother to inform listeners that the Palestinian Authority’s budgetary priorities do include spending millions of dollars a year on monthly stipends for convicted terrorists, some of whom receive more than the teachers’ salaries she quotes.

Knell’s account of the ceremony at which Hanan al Hroub received her award was as follows:

Ecstatic, she took to the stage at the ceremony in Dubai and lifted the trophy for herself and all Palestinians.

[recording]: “I did it! I won! Falastin [Palestine] won!”

As in the previous BBC report, no mention was made of this:

Associated Press staff in Dubai where the award ceremony took place reported that: “As al-Hroub accepted her award, Palestinians in the audience waved their country’s flag and some chanted, fists pumping in the air, “With our souls, our blood, we sacrifice for you Palestine.”

Knell went on to give listeners a sanitized account of the surge in terror attacks that commenced last autumn, erasing all Palestinian responsibility from the picture.

It was a victory that gave Palestinians hope at a miserable time. Since October [of] last year, violence here has flared. [recording of riot] These were recent clashes with Israeli soldiers at the Qalandiya checkpoint in Ramallah. This is a tough environment to grow up in.

Listeners were then told that:

Hanan herself comes from this Bethlehem refugee camp. She decided to go into teaching after her family was caught up in a shooting. Her daughters were left traumatized and didn’t get the extra help they needed at school. Now Hanan specializes in working with troubled children. Her classroom is a peaceful place where teamwork, trust, and respect are rewarded.

Although it is not clear why the BBC found it necessary to revisit this story at this time, it is obvious that Yolande Knell found nothing new to add. That is particularly remarkable given that after the peace-loving teacher made headlines in March, details emerged of her husband’s involvement in terrorism.

A Palestinian teacher who won a $1 million prize for teaching nonviolence will keep her award even though her husband participated in a terror attack that killed six Israelis.

Hanan al-Hroub received the UK-based Varkey Foundation’s Global Teacher Prize at a ceremony in Dubai earlier this month for a curriculum she called “No to Violence.”

Her husband, Omar, served 10 years in an Israeli prison after being convicted as an accomplice in a deadly 1980 bombing attack in Hebron in which the victims were walking home from Friday night Sabbath prayers, The Associated Press reported. Omar al-Hroub was a chemist who provided chemicals needed for making the bombs, the AP reported.

Since the BBC last reported on this story in March, the terror attack in which the man who became its protagonist’s husband participated, has been glorified by Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party on Facebook and in an official Palestinian Authority newspaper.

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