AFP’s Error, Editorializing and Omissions

By Published On: October 30, 2016

Mavi Marmara aid ship.jpg

Weapons recovered from the “Mavi Marmara,” which AFP identified as an “aid ship” though it carried no aid (Photo from Israel Defense Forces)

Agence France Presse, an influential news service, ran two articles yesterday which between them contained a factual error, key omissions, and editorializing.

In a factual error, the first sentence of yesterday’s article (“Gaza flotilla raid victims’ kin vow legal battle against Israel“) incorrectly characterized the “Mavi Marmara” as “a Gaza-bound aid ship.”

The “Mavi Marmara” was not an “aid ship” at all. As documented in the UN’s Palmer Report (p. 47), it carried 546 passengers but no humanitarian aid supplies for the people of the Gaza Strip:

If the flotilla had been a purely humanitarian mission it is hard to see why so many passengers were embarked and with what purpose. Furthermore, the quality and value of many of the humanitarian goods on board the vessels is questionable. There were large quantities of humanitarian and construction supplies on board the Gazze 1, Eleftheri Mesogeio and Defne-Y. There were some foodstuffs and medical goods on board the Mavi Marmara, although it seems that these were intended for the voyage itself. Any “humanitarian supplies” were limited to foodstuffs and toys carried in passengers’ personal baggage. The same situation appears to be the case for two other of the vessels: the Sfendoni, and the Challenger I. There was little need to organize a flotilla of six ships to deliver humanitarian assistance if only three were required to carry the available humanitarian supplies. The number of journalists embarked on the ships gives further power to the conclusion that the flotilla’s primary purpose was to generate publicity.

Earlier this month CAMERA’s BBC Watch prompted correction of the identical error, and CAMERA has contacted AFP to request that the wire service likewise correct.

Moreover, while “Mavi Marmara” passengers were not carrying aid, they were carrying weapons and they used these weapons to violently attack Israeli soldiers who boarded the ship, facts entirely ignored in the 633-word article.

In another serious omission, the article refers to “the Turkish Islamic Charity IHH that organised the flotilla.” At no point does the article note the IHH’s reported ties to the Turkish regime and terrorist organizations. The Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center reported that IHH in Germany has been designated a terrorist group and that the United States also has examined the possibility of making a similar designation due the organization’s “past support for global jihad,” its involvement in the filed terrorist attack on Los Angeles International Airport in 2000, its extremists anti-Western and anti-Israeli Islamist character “and the support it gives to Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States.”

A separate AFP article yesterday, about a Palestinian ramming attack (“Palestinian attacker shot by Israeli troops: army“), leaves out key information about Palestinian fatalities in the last year of Palestinian attacks. The article ends:

Since October last year, the violence has claimed the lives of 235 Palestinians, 36 Israelis, two Americans, a Jordanian, an Eritrean and a Sudanese, according to an AFP account.

The story leaves out the key information included in most other AFP stories (most recently, for example, on Oct. 26) that Israel identified most of those killed as assailants:

Most of the Palestinians killed were carrying out knife, gun or car-ramming attacks, according to Israeli authorities.

Others were shot dead during protests or clashes, while some were killed in Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip.

Finally, like several earlier AFP articles, this article uses the highly problematic formulation pitting “analysts” as a whole against Israel. About the causes of Palestinian violence, yesterday’s article states:

Analysts say Palestinian frustration with the Israeli occupation and settlements-building in the West Bank, comatose peace efforts and their own fractured leadership have fed the violence.

Israel says incitement by Palestinian leaders and media is a leading cause.

As CAMERA’s Gilead Ini documented, it isn’t only Israel that describes Palestinian incitement as a problem. Plenty of analysts do, too, as does the Quartet, John Kerry, and countless others.

That’s a lot of bad reporting for one Saturday from the wire service who employs as a reporter Nasser Abu Baker, the chairmen of the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, the leading force for the boycott of Israeli journalists and media.

We expose the anti-Israel lies so you don't have to. But we can't do it without your help. Join the fight -- Donate now
Tell the World – Share Now!

More from SNAPSHOTS

  • Reuters Falsely Links Jerusalem Embassy, Two-State Solution

    January 9, 2019

    The Jerusalem office park which houses Guatemala's embassy Multiple recent Reuters articles incorrectly report that moving the Brazilian embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem is a dramatic move away from the two-state solution. For instance, [...]

  • American Lutheran In Jerusalem Affirms that IDF Soldiers Are “Stormtroopers,” Backtracks

    December 19, 2018

    Rev. Carrie Ballenger Smith is a pastor at the Church of the Redeemer in Jerusalem. She ministers to the English-speaking congregation that meets at the Lutheran church, which is located in the Old City of [...]

  • LA Times, Places Not Banned, and Inaccurate Terminology

    December 11, 2018

    Not on Trump's travel ban list: Egypt, Afghanistan, 'Palestine' At least eight times in the last 14 years, The Los Angeles Times has corrected the inaccurate use of the term "Palestine," but that fact did [...]

  • The Washington Post Ignores Antisemitic Attack in Los Angeles

    November 29, 2018

    The Washington Post has warned about a “rising tide of antisemitism.” But as CAMERA has highlighted, The Post’s coverage of antisemitism has frequently been selective and is often politicized. More recently, the newspaper even ignored [...]

  • Think Tank: Iran Was Closer to Building a Bomb Than Previously Thought

    November 23, 2018

    A Nov. 20, 2018 report by a Washington D.C.-based think tank, the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) argues that Iran’s illegal nuclear weapons program was “more advanced than Western intelligence agencies and the [...]

  • AFP Headline Casts Palestinian Assailant as Victim

    November 21, 2018

    Agence France Presse yesterday published a throwback headline, bringing us back to the period almost two years ago in which media outlets serially produced headlines which depicted Palestinian attackers as the victims. The wire agency's [...]

  • Founder of Women’s March Distances Herself from Linda Sarsour and Other Haters

    November 20, 2018

    Teresa Shook, founder of the Women's March, has asked Linda Sarsour and other haters to step down as co-chairs of the movement. In her

  • More Hypocrisy and Anti-Semitism From Linda Sarsour

    November 19, 2018

    In an earlier CAMERA exposé, we pointed out the self-serving allegiances and disgraceful hypocrisy of Linda Sarsour (of Women's March fame). We demonstrated how she poses as a universal activist who embraces all marginalized people [...]

  • New Yorker‘s Ostensible Accuracy on Gaza Fisherman

    November 19, 2018

    Nov. 20 Update: New Yorker Corrects on Gaza Fisherman's Death After severely tripping up in its Gaza coverage earlier this year, The New Yorker -- a publication ostensibly "known for its high standards" in fact-checking [...]

  • Small Steps: Improved NY Times Language on Target of Hamas Rockets

    November 15, 2018

    Earlier this week, we pointed out how a New York Times article about fighting between Israel and Hamas neglected to inform readers that Palestinian rockets were fired indiscriminately toward civilians in Israeli towns and cities. [...]