22 Oct 2015

Ten Stories The BBC Considers More Notable Than Suicides Caused By False Rape Allegations

Even this week the Cheshire case is still in the headlines, and we’ve noticed reports as far afield as Ghana and Nigeria.

In order to give a more complete picture of the BBC’s disgraceful bias here, we thought it would be interesting to examine some of the “news” it decided to report on its website in preference to the Jay Cheshire tragedy. The list below ignores national BBC stories, and simply looks at article found either on the BBC South section of the website during the week in which most others reported the case and/or prominently featured on its BBC South today news programme. Jay lived in Hampshire so even if the BBC had decided not to give the case national coverage it would still have been founded here at the very least were the BBC a reputable and neutral organisation. All the stories were also tweeted by the BBC South Twitter account.

Here are the reports licence fee payers funded in preference to a 17 year old being driven to suicide by allegedly false rape accusations:











To any fair minded person, none of the above stories is even half as newsworthy as the Jay Cheshire case, a story which was in every newspaper other than the Guardian, often on consecutive days. The spoon statue which it deemed so significant disappeared within a week and the marathon runner they reported on failed to even finish the race. Like much of society, such is the BBC’s contempt for justice and men’s equality issues that it has more concern for abused an escaped animals than it does for boys who are falsely accused of rape and go on to take their lives as a result.
We’ve sent this same list to the BBC and also enquired as to whether there was a policy at the organisation which prohibited the reporting of such cases. They decline to respond to the list, though stated “may I assure you that there is no policy in BBC News around reporting cases of false allegations of rape.”
Seeing as we still cant’ find any BBC reports about the Cheshire case (or any simialr such case) we’d strongly encourage readers to make an official complaint about this matter.

Source

No comments:

Post a Comment