Telegraph blogger Ed West recommends a new report by former BBC journalist Dennis Sewell, A Question of Attitude: The BBC and Bias Beyond News, in which the author accuses the Beeb of abandoning impartiality in order to further its left-liberal political agenda and “cites a number of BBC programmes which have, he feels, been unjustifiably biased”.
West offers us an egregious example: “Worst of all, perhaps, wasGeert Wilders – Europe’s Most Dangerous Man? (BBC Two – February 2011).” He quotes Sewell’s attack on what he claims was the documentary’s misrepresentation of Wilders’ views:
Billed as a profile of the controversial Dutch politician, for much of the time it felt more like a character assassination…. More than once in the film, emphasis was placed on Wilders’ supposed wish to have the Koran banned…. Wilders has many times explained and clarified his position on this – and indeed is briefly glimpsed in the film, trying to do so at a press conference. The truth of the matter is that, within the context of a discussion on banning the sale of Mein Kampf in Holland (a measure that was passed into law at the instigation of the Left), Wilders remarked that, if the Left were to be consistent, the logic of its arguments for banning Hitler’s book should lead it also to seek a ban on the Koran, which contains passages that it should find just as odious as the passages in Mein Kampf that were so objectionable.
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