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BBC’s Mass Public Deception Campaign against Iran
Here is a not-so-shocking report on how the BBC is leading a mass-deception campaign against the June 12 Iranian elections and the rallies that have followed. Apparently, the BBC has shown pictures and footage from President Ahmedinejad’s ‘victory rally’ as an ‘opposition rally’.
I’m done, Paul Joesph Watson has to say more.
BBC Caught In Mass Public Deception With Iran Propaganda
The BBC has again been caught engaging in mass public deception by using photographs of pro-Ahmadinejad rallies in Iran and claiming they represent anti-government protests in favor of Hossein Mousavi.
An image used by the L.A. Times on the front page of its website Tuesday showed Iranian President Ahmadinejad waving to a crowd of supporters at a public event.
In a story covering the election protests yesterday, the BBC News website used a closer shot of the same scene, but with Ahmadinejad cut out of the frame. The caption under the photograph read, ‘Supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi again defied a ban on protests’.
The BBC photograph is clearly a similar shot of the same pro-Ahmadinejad rally featured in the L.A. Times image, yet the caption erroneously claims it represents anti-Ahmadinejad protesters.
[My Note: Open Both Images to see how the same image has been manipulated and how misleading captions have been used]
“Well I guess it sure was a popular fictional rally for Mousavi, because I later noticed while browsing the news sites a familiar picture on the BBC’s lead Iran story – it shows the same crowd, zoomed in to cut out Ahmadinejad,” a reader told the WhatReallyHappened website. “It is clearly the same protest as in the background are the same tree and odd circular building. However, the BBC managed to outdo the LA times in quality reporting – their actual comment under the photo from the huge PRO-Ahmadinejad rally reads ‘Supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi again defied a ban on protests’ – a blatant lie and deliberately misleading description of what is actually occurring in Iran!”
As soon as the truth about the misrepresented images surfaced on the WhatReallyHappened website yesterday, the BBC changed the photo caption on their original article. The caption now reads, ‘Tehran has seen mass demonstrations by all sides since the disputed election’.
This is not the first time the BBC has been caught red-handed using crude image and video framing techniques for the purposes of political propaganda.
During the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, the BBC and other mainstream news outlets broadcast closely framed footage of the “mass uprising” during which Iraqis, aided by U.S. troops, toppled the Saddam Hussein statue in Fardus Square.
The closely framed footage was used to imply that hundreds or thousands of Iraqis were involved in a Berlin Wall-style “historic” liberation, yet when wide angle shots were later published on the Internet . footage that was never broadcast on live television, the reality of the “mass uprising” became clear. The crowd around the statue was sparse and consisted mostly of U.S. troops and journalists. The BBC later had to admit that only “dozens” of Iraqis had participated in toppling the statue. The entire scene was a manufactured farce yet the propaganda technique of blocking wide-angle shots from being broadcast convinced the world that the event represented a triumphant and historic mass popular uprising on behalf of the Iraqi people.
Whatever your views on the legitimacy of Ahmadinejad and the accuracy of the Iranian election results, the fact that the Anglo-American establishment and its media organs are exploiting and fanning the flames of chaos in Iran to provoke further instability is unquestionable.
Indeed, the U.S. State Department, which routinely demonizes the Internet as a tool of extremists and terrorists when it is used to criticize U.S. foreign policy, took the unprecedented step today of requesting that Twitter.com “delay planned maintenance work so that Iranian protesters can continue to use it to post images and reports of unrest,” according to a London Times report .
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| Print article | This entry was posted by Ammar on June 21, 2009 at 1:08 pm, and is filed under The World, south asia. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |


about 1 year ago
Could just be lazy journalists. I mean I have seen images coming out of Iran that are far more inflammatory than the one pictured here it isn’t like the BBC has to lie. Either way I still take issue with the this kind of distortion especially since more compelling images haven’t been disseminated by the international press. What happened to footage like this:
http://www.newsy.com/videos/protests_in_perspectives
about 1 year ago
BBC does it all the time, it also did it at the end of 2008 during the Gaza Conflict, i read about it in an article in Dawn (they took from some foreign reporter). This article claimed that BBC supported Israel, refering to the demarcation as Israel’s fort.
Not only BBC, but if u see fox news, they also give prejudiced opinion on news.
Also the Pakistani media especially Geo leaves no chance of making the people much more depressed then they already are by there senseless talk shows every night.
They are all one and the same.