Media coverage of the Arab–Israeli conflict refers to the reporting of the
Arab–Israeli conflict by
journalists in international
news media.Media coverage of the conflict has been dogged by allegations of bias on both sides. These perceptions of bias, possibly exacerbated by the
hostile media effect,
have generated more complaints of partisan reporting than any other news topic and have led to a proliferation of
media watchdog groups on both sides.
Diction
or word choice, affects the interpretation of the same set of entities or events. There is an emotional and semantic difference between the verbs
died and
killed, and similarly between
kill and
murder;
murder evokes stronger negative emotions and connotes intent. In the context of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, various terminological issues arise. The terms "disputed territories" versus "occupied territories" reflect different positions on the legal status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The terms "security fence" and "apartheid wall," "neighbourhood" and "settlement," and "militant," "freedom fighter," and "terrorist," while used to describe the same entities, present them in a different light and suggest a different narrative. Similarly, describing an attack or bombing as a "response" or "retaliation" again places the events in a different light.
Retaliation
A study by the American organization Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting monitored the use of the term "retaliation" in the nightly news broadcasts of the three main American networks CBS, ABC, and NBC between September 2000 through March 17, 2002. It found that of the 150 occasions when "retaliate" and its variants were used to describe attacks in the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, 79 percent were references to Israel "retaliating" and only 9 percent were references to Palestinians "retaliating"
. This could possibly be attributed to the intended purpose of independent and larger groups of Palestinian militants.
Emotive Language
In a study of BBC television news coverage, the Glasgow Media Group documented differences in the language used by journalists for Israelis and Palestinians. The study found that terms such as "atrocity," "brutal murder," "mass murder," "savage cold blooded killing," "lynching" and "slaughter" were used describe the death of Israelis but not for the death of Palestinians. The word "terrorist" was often used to describe Palestinians. However, in reports of an Israeli group attempting to bomb a Palestinian school members of the Israeli group were referred to as "extremists" or "vigilantes" but not as "terrorists."
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