Ivo Skoric on Mon, 26 Nov 2001 23:40:01 +0100 (CET) |
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More media manipulation in the West - maybe Al Jazeera should consider opening an office in London? ivo ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- Stop the War Coalition (StW) PO Box 3739, London E5 8EJ 07951 235 915 <mailto:office@stopwar.org.uk>office@stopwar.org.uk http://www.stopwar.org.uk http://www.mwaw.org Tuesday 20 November 2001 TO: The Editor Dear Editors, Protesters in this country are accustomed to police under-estimating their numbers on demonstrations. In the case of Sunday's huge Stop the War march, however, the gap between police estimates - 15,000 - and those of the organisers - 100,000 - takes some explaining. This is the organisers' view of the figures. We challenge the BBC, the Press Association and the police to give us theirs. The police told us on two separate occasions that they estimated the marchers as 30,000 and 20,000 - 40,000. Yet after the march was over, their estimates were mysteriously "revised down" and the press quoted their final estimate as 15,000. The Stop the War Coalition went to considerable lengths to make an accurate estimate of the numbers present. Using observers and counters, we arrived at the figure of 100,000. This figure was not released until 4pm, when it was announced - twice - from the platform, and press released. Yet the BBC and the Press Association persistently quoted us as claiming 50,000. Only when a spokesperson for the Coalition rang the PA to complain did they finally concede that our figure was indeed 100,000. Neither the PA nor the BBC made independent assessments of the numbers. Instead, both quoted police figures and deliberately misquoted the organisers' estimates. Journalists are keeping people passive by denying to the wider public a sense of the true size of the anti-war movement. If more people opposed to the bombing were aware that London was packed with 100,000 protesters on Sunday it would increase their own willingness to speak out and join in. Our demonstration has revealed the pro-bombing "consensus" to be a chimera. Finally, the BBC's own guidelines say: << OPPOSITION TO THE WAR Enabling the national debate remains a vital task. The concept of impartiality still applies. All views should be reflected in due proportion to mirror the depth and spread of opinion. We must reflect any significant opposition in the UK (and elsewhere) to the military conflict and allow their arguments to be heard and tested. Those who speak and perhaps demonstrate against war are to be reported as part of the national and international reality. >> Is this principle not worth upholding in print as well as on the air? Yours, John Pilger George Galloway MP Ken Loach Harold Pinter Charles Shaar Murray Andrew Murray, chair Stop the War Coalition Lindsey German, StW Coalition _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold