Off The Rails

 

From the Guardian:

John Whittingdale told the corporation its track record was ‘not faultless’ and it needed to correct ‘erroneous views’ quickly, letters reveal

The culture secretary warned the BBC that it must be impartial in covering the EU referendum and act quickly to tackle complaints about “erroneous views”, it has emerged.

John Whittingdale wrote to Rona Fairhead, chair of the BBC Trust, and broadcast regulator Ofcom, claiming that the corporation’s “track record in coverage of EU matters is not faultless”.

Whittingdale, who sent the letters in June but only made them public on Thursday night, said that the BBC and Ofcom should act on complaints about EU referendum coverage within 24 hours.

“The potential for unwarranted distortions to informed debate bears high risks,” he said. “And the longer that erroneous views or partial coverage are allowed to stand unchallenged or uncorrected, the greater the chance of public and democratic detriment.”

He said that Ofcom currently can “expedite” investigations into complaints about coverage in seven to 10 days, adding that it is in the public interest to slash this to as short a timeframe as possible.

“Where lapses occur, it is of course vital to the public that adequate and proportionate corrections are made in prompt order,” he said. “In light of the huge importance the public will place on the EU referendum, and the coverage of it by broadcasters, I would encourage Ofcom and the BBC Trust as the responsible regulators to consider whether your respective processes for redress for complaints which are upheld are as efficient and timely as possible.”

In 2005, an independent report commissioned by the BBC’s board of governors found that the corporation was guilty of “cultural and unintentional bias” in coverage of Europe

Why would he ever consider that the BBC would receive any complaints about its EU referendum coverage?

I wonder if that will include the BBC’s coverage of the ‘European’ migration crisis in which it has helped to apply massive pressure upon Cameron to change his asylum policies.

The BBC independent?  Not when it takes part in the political arguments and tries to influence them itself.

 

Holme Run

Quotas…how does that work?  If the migrants don’t want to live in the country they are forced to go to what use are quotas and why should one country or another then have to take them just because they have decided they want to go there?

 

The Today programme devoted the last half hour to the migration crisis….that’ll be half an hour and the other 23.5 hours on the BBC devoted to promoting the migration crisis.

They had on Sir John Holmes, former UN Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs.  (08:39)  I’m not sure why they [Sarah Montague, emoting beautifully about migrants as per the norm] had him on as they pretty much ignored everything of relevance that he said….’everything’ that is if it didn’t reflect the BBC’s own extreme position on immigration.

Holmes said that there is an asylum crisis but there was also an underlying migrant crisis, ie that of economic migrants.  Montague ignored that serious point that has been raised before, that the question of how many refugees any country can take is also wrapped up with the issue of the number of economic migrants that have already flooded into a country.  Holmes also made the very relevant point that quotas simply won’t work because the migrants have no intention of being told where to live….so all the pressure on the UK to take ‘their quota’ is nonsense if most migrants seemingly want to go to Germany.  Holmes says the UK has done very good work in helping the refugees in the Middle East but he says we should take more here..however he also said that accepting asylum seekers wasn’t the answer and that the crisis in Syria had to be addressed.  You may have expected Montague to leap on that in a journalistic fashion, but no, she dodged asking the question, perhaps the answer would not be to the BBC’s liking….how to siolve Syria?  That’s the only question that really matters.  But not to the BBC?  Usually the BBC is all too eager to end a war if it means stopping the West or Israel bashing Muslim terrorists…but seemingly not a war that sees Muslim terrorists being all too successful.

I’m guessing she had an agenda that didn’t include anything that not only stopped a war but stopped the flow of migrants to Europe….despite her admitting that the current situation just encourages more to come to Europe...’it is unlimited’.

 

Yesterday we had the pleasure of listening to the Chief Rabbi on the Today programme lecturing us about humanity…he’d just had a conflab with the Pope who declared that ‘We all share this world together, therefore we need to care for this world together,’”...the chief rabbi told us we must help these people ‘knocking on the door of Europe’.…hmm….whilst I support the existence of Israel I have to say I’m not being lectured about how we must reach out to everyone and open the borders when he doesn’t say the same about the Palestinians….when I hear him advocating a ‘one state’ solution for the Israeli/Palestinian conflict I might take his words and sentiments seriously…but he knows that such a policy would destroy Israel….strange he doesn’t recognise the same will happen to Europe…as Boris Johnson has already alluded to with his ‘mass migration doomed the Roman Empire’ comment..

We need a paradigm mindshift he tells us…we look on these migrants as if they are from Mars he tells us….the Palestinians might say the same, he doesn’t tell us.

He refused to name numbers which makes his pleas meaningless….though definitely ‘some of them should be allowed in’

Webb managed to get him to proclaim that economic migrants were equally worthy of ‘asylum’ as their lives were in danger.

The BBC got what it wanted.

 

I was also listening to Lyse Doucet the other day on the TV news and if I hadn’t known she was BBC reporter I might have mistaken her for some sort of pro-immigration campaigner as she told us that something must be done and more migrants must be allowed in….having said that one look at her Twitter feed says it all…here curiously echoing the good Rabbi’s words….

 

lyse doucet retweeted jagmeet singh

lyse doucet added,

What?

It seems we are being fed a line on the migration crisis and people are happy to look the other way and accept whatever is said if it makes the migrants tales more harrowing and piles on the ‘guilt’ that puts pressure on politicians to open the borders.   The Today programme had a tale of terror from Kobane in Syria telling us of the dreadful dangers that the inhabitants still live under and that many are still fleeing…could that have been a counter to the story that the father of the drowned children has gone back to Kobane in war torn Syria to bury his family and live there which no doubt has raised a few eyebrows in question about his reasons for taking that terrible risk with his family…

Aylan Kurdi buried alongside brother and mother in Syria

The funeral of three-year-old Aylan Kurdi, his brother Galip and their mother takes place in their hometown of Kobane in Syria

The father whose wife and sons drowned as they attempted to reach the Greek island of Kos from Turkey warned fellow Syrians not to risk the lives of their loved ones by attempting to flee the country, as he buried his family on Friday.

Speaking at the funerals of Aylan Kurdi, three, his brother Ghalib, five, and their mother Rehana, in the Syrian town of Kobane, Abdullah Kurdi blamed the international community for its failure to protect civilians caught in the nation’s bitter civil war.

Local officials had reportedly tried to organise the funeral in neighbouring Turkey before crossing the border into Kobane. But Mr Kurdi insisted it should take place in the land of the children’s birth.

 

Apparently he is now saying he will stay there with the graves of his family.

This is a man who put that family onto a tiny boat to make an unnecessary sea crossing knowing that his wife was terrified of the water and that a 3 year old and a 5 year old, without life jackets, would have no chance of survival if the worst happened, as it did, as he should have expected.  He is no hero or ‘victim’ of the West and its asylum policy as the BBC seem to be trying to portray him as.  Every sympathy for his wife and children but for him?  Not so much.

His family were safe in Turkey but we were told that because of a log jam in the Turkish asylum process applicants were forced to take the dangerous DIY route in dangerous small boats…how true is that?  They could of course head off across land or go by ferry perhaps….in May the Telegraph reported that Syrians were in fact being allowed to take ferries to Greece quite freely and openly…

Turkish border officials are allowing huge numbers of Syrian asylum seekers to cross into Europe on holiday ferries serving the Greek islands, a Telegraph investigation has found.

Residents of Greece’s eastern Aegean islands say ferries carrying hundreds of Syrian migrants at a time are making the short hop from Turkey’s coast, with Turkish officials making no attempt to stop them boarding.

In what appears to be yet another gap in Europe’s border controls, the migrants have no need to risk their lives in rickety people-smuggling boats or pay exorbitant fees to smuggling gangs.

It turns out also that the family never made an asylum claim to go to Canada as was claimed to much anguished comment in response..’if only…they’d still be alive…’.guilt guilt guilt.

One other thing….a UKIP candidate tweeted this: “The little Syrian boy was well clothed and well fed. He died because his parents were greedy for the good life in Europe. Queue jumping costs.”…now maybe the word greed is one of those trigger words that are too honest to be allowed but why the outrage…other than the fact it was a UKIP man who said this?  After all Tory Malcolm Rifkind on the Today programme said exactly the same thing in less emotive wording…

The point I would have to make from a humanitarian view, I don’t blame people wanting to find a better life in the countries of northern Europe, but from an asylum point of view, if you are already in Turkey than your life is not in danger, your children are not going to lose their lives, your children are safe from Syria, so it becomes a separate issue as to whether the countries of Europe should be expected to have, as it were, an open ended position for anyone who wants to come here.

No BBC journalist declaring Rifkind is the ‘worst human alive’:

H/T Don’tblamemeivotedukip:

Screen Shot 2015-09-03 at 18.47.07

The BBC confirmed to Breitbart London that Morrison’s use of his BBC-linked Twitter account was inappropriate, and that the licence fee-funded journalist had removed the comment.

A spokesman for the organisation said: “The BBC has clear social media guidelines which staff must adhere to, even when using personal accounts.

“We have spoken to Alex and reminded him of his responsibility to uphold our guidelines. He has deleted the tweet.”

 

That family would still be alive if they didn’t think the streets of Europe were paved with gold and were encouraged to do so by the pro-immigration extremists cheerled by the BBC.

 

WEEKEND OPEN THREAD!

Well, the emotional blackmail from the BBC (along with others) has worked and we can now look forward to thousands of Syrians enriching our country. You have to hand it to the BBC, they use the power of their broadcasting monopoly to undermine our country at every opportunity! Anyway here’s a new open thread.

Back To The Future

 

 

Map

 

 

Boris Johnson counters Dan Hodges’ judgement of history with a bit of historical perspective……

‘Mass migration brought down the Roman Empire’?

Boris Johnson has reacted to the image of Aylan Kurdi and described it as a “very, very shocking image”, writes Henry Samuel in Calais.

“It’s very difficult; we have to address the problem at the source and stop people coming like this, but certainly if people are really in need and are scared for their lives, we must receive them,” he said.

But should the UK take more refugees?

Quote It’s is very difficult because we mustn’t create the feeling around Europe in all these zones where there are problems that they can get here without any problem. We mustn’t created a pull factor and that’s the problem now, we must distinguish between those who are really scared of persecution and those who are migrants looking for a wealthier life.”

“We must above all be very clear with people who want to come from these countries that it’s not an Eldorado here, it’s not simply a question of turning up and receiving benefits. And I fear that if we don’t make this clear then we will create the conditions for migration to continue and increase.”

“Let us not forget that the fall of the Roman Empire was down to immigration. Massive movements of people in the end is not sustainable.”

 

Of course there is another historical perspective that invites comparison as millions of Muslims eye up an attempt to cross into Europe…..that BBC map at the top of the post looks awfully familiar…the Ottoman Empire and its incursion into Europe……

 

ottoman-conquests

 

‘Europe’ as we know it will no longer exist in a very short time.

 

 

“Germany, Germany.”

Over 150,000 migrants have reached Hungary this year, most coming through the southern border with Serbia. Many apply for asylum but quickly try to leave for richer EU countries.

 

The Telegraph reports an example of those ‘desperate’ migrants….refusing to go to a refugee camp…..no longer ‘refugees’ then?…what is it they want, was it safety or a new life in Europe?….Maybe the BBC can answer as they report the migrants chanting “Germany, Germany.”

 

EU migration crisis: Hungary refugees trying to reach Austria refuse to be taken to camp and forced off train – latest

The train, which left at 10.20 BST was bound for towns near the Austrian border and several hundred migrants were on board.

James Badcock in Budapest said that the train then stopped at Bicske, which is one of the country’s four main refugee camps.

Migrants were then taken off, state news agency MTI reported, and AFP estimates that about 250 to 300 migrants were on board.

The train was due to split, with three carriages due to travel to Szonbathely and the rest to Sopron, both near Hungary’s western border with Austria.

ITV’s James Mates has tweeted that a man and woman with a baby were on a track at a Hungarian train station in a desperate attempt not to be taken to a migrant camp nearby.

But he later tweeted that Hungarian police were forced to let them back onto a train.

History Will Judge [Though of course Tony Livesey & Co already have]

 

It’s all about the posturing, refugee one-upmanship……

 

retweeted

Peter Dominiczak retweeted Michael Deacon

Disastrous comment…

Peter Dominiczak added,

19 retweets 7 favourites

Dan hodges does his own bit of posturing with this hostage to future events:

Refugee crisis: David Cameron is placing himself on the wrong side of history

The comments absolutely slaughter him…and I’m sure this only confirms in his own mind how right and righteous he is.

 

 

 

SHILLING FOR SYRIA….

I don’t know about you but it strikes me that the BBC has gone into overdrive to soften up the Nation for a wave of “Syrians”. The image of the little 3 year old Syrian boy who drowned on the beach has been milked for maximum emotional blackmail and true to form the Left have seized upon this and are insisting that our borders open up and we let ’em in. The BBC are also very cute to throw about terms such as “refugees”, “migrants” “asylum seekers” to make THEIR case when it suits them. It’s a moments like this that the menace of the BBC crystallises. It is a force for the destruction of all that so many of us hold dear. It is colluding with those who smuggle people to ensure that the UK becomes part of Northern Africa.

In Need?

Migrants arriving in Turkey

 

A young child drowns as his parents force him into a tiny boat to go from Turkey to Europe and it turns over not long into the trip throwing all into the sea.  The boy, his brother and many of the adults drown.

Those who are demanding the borders be opened wide to immigrants are delighted, who can doubt that this is what they have longed for, a tragedy to use as ‘click-bait’ and Twitter-agitprop, to exploit as propaganda to ‘shake the conscience of the world’?

The BBC indeed has recognised the importance of the photographs as it is being ruthlessly exploited by the likes of the Independent and the Guardian…as every journalist knows ‘the tears of a child says more than a thousand words ever can.’

The BBC however, to be fair, has stepped back slightly from such exploitation of a dead child, but it is usually more than happy to paint a picture of terrible tragedy and use migrant deaths to leverage our ‘moral obligations’.

The question that is not asked is why the parents of these children decided to make such an obviously dangerous journey in an overcrowded boat with no life jackets for their children when they had no need to leave Turkey, a safe location for them…they decided to make the journey not because of real need but because they wanted, not a safe life, but a better life.  They risked their children’s lives completely unnecessarily.  This is not a ‘refugee’ tragedy but an economic migrant one.  Remember the complete outrage at this...’Bear Grylls blasted by RNLI for ‘leaving young son on rocks’ during lifeboat training exercise’  and yet no such outraged opprobrium for the wreckless parents of these two kids aged 3 and 5.

Yesterday we had the self-righteous Tony Livesey on 5Live tag-teaming with the LibDem’s morally challenged Tim Farron against the Tory Tim Laughton and making the dubious connection between the deaths of the migrants in the lorry in Austria, the Iraq War and our ‘obligation’ to take in migrants.

The LibDems say Cameron is playing politics…

retweeted

and should stop playing politics over humanitarian crisis says .

Which kind of suggests it is the LibDems who are actually playing politics as Cameron has not bowed to the sanctimonious moralisers but has actually stood firm against those, like Farron, and Livesey, who make grandly sanctimonious statements, which are more about them than the refugees/migrants….

retweeted

There is a humanitarian crisis on our doorstep, but UK Government appears disengaged, cold and irrelevant

Farron makes this meaningless statement that is only intended to burnish his compassionate and humane credentials but in fact says absolutley nothing at all about the problem or the solution…all it says is ‘let all the migrants come here’.  It is empty, simplistic posturing for the cameras….

“When mothers are desperately trying to stop their babies from drowning when their boat has capsized, when people are being left to suffocate in the backs of lorries by evil gangs of traffickers and when children’s bodies are being washed to shore, Britain needs to act.”

“It is heartbreaking what is happening on our continent. We cannot keep turning our backs on this. We can – and must – do more.”

 Livesey was pretty much a disgrace, his programme had nothing to do with journalism, merely intent on berating those who take a more rational view of events and see that the issues will not be solved by short term grandiose gestures that are pure compassion ‘showbiz’…so we take in a few migrants…then what?  Take in 10,000 as Labour suggest and then what?  The migrants from around the world will suddenly go ‘Well OK then, that’s it…we’ll all go back home then…the UK has done it’s bit’?  Like hell.  They’ll keep on coming…in their thousands, millions.

Taking in a few migrants does nothing to solve the crisis.

Yesterday Sarah Montague struggled through an interview  (08:14) with Guy Verhofstadt former Belgian prime minister, which she opened with the words of Germany’s Bild that Britain was among the ‘slackers of Europe’ when it comes to taking in migrants.  She rather suggestively wanted to know if that was correct.  Now the moral grandstander Tim Farron yesterday also drew support from those same words…even though he described Bild as a ‘scurrilous red top’…curious how alarmist sensationalism from a ‘scurrilous red top’ is now used by the normally sneeringly disdainful BBC to bolster its pro-migrant stance.

Verhofstadt went off thread though and stated that the root cause of this crisis was the failure of Europe to deal with the Syrian war and support the takedown of Assad…we are now suffering the consequences of that failure…a failure that the BBC and the Left had no small part in creating.  Which is no doubt why Montague rapidly moved on and demanded to know ‘What is the chance that this crisis can be solved by accepting more migrants?’…so you know exactly what her priorities are…going on to proclaim ‘So the answer is quota’s’ [of migrants] and demanding to know  ‘Is it acceptable that Britain has opted out?’

Whilst saying the UK should take some of the migrants who make it to Europe Verhofstad again went off message and said that the real solution was to stop migrants coming here in the first place and that their asylum claims should be processed in safe haven countries near the zone of conflict.  Again Montague didn’t want to explore that suggestion.

Here The Spectator makes a similar point in a reasoned and measured manner that by far outstrips any of the ‘intellectually lazy feel-good policy for the bien‑pensant’ analysis the BBC does itself…Here’s the answer to your migrant crisis, Mr Cameron

If you step outside the usual angry ding-dong, the posturing of those both pro-immigrant and anti-immigrant; if you resist the easy option taken by the chattering classes who claim the moral high ground by insisting on open borders, you can see that European policy is the result of moral confusion.

What does rescue imply and to whom does it apply? Just being poor does not make someone eligible for being ‘rescued’ by a life in Europe. Mass poverty has to be tackled, but the only way it can be done is for poor countries to catch up with the rich ones. There are ways in which we can help that process, but encouraging the mass emigration of their most enterprising young people is not one of them.

Europe has a moral obligation to rescue, not to make dreams come true.

How can Europe help these people?

Should we invite them to Europe? This has been the defining issue so far in European discussion of the Syrian refugee crisis: ‘How many refugees should Europe take?’ It’s all about us. Unfortunately, while well meaning, this approach is fundamentally irresponsible when judged from the perspective not of the consequences for Europe, but the consequences for Syrians.

The smart way to meet the duty to rescue is to incubate that economic recovery now, before the conflict ends.

Europe can do that by fostering a Syria–in-exile economy located in Jordan and other neighbouring countries. Working in this economy would restore some dignity to the daily lives of refugees and offer them credible hope of a return to normality.

Europe has a duty to fish refugees out of the sea because it is morally responsible for tempting them on to the sea. So whatever else Europe does, it must stop this policy of temptation. Paying a crook thousands of dollars for a place on a boat should not entitle a Syrian refugee to a more privileged entry to Europe. It is profoundly unfair to the other suffering refugees.

Montague didn’t take issue with Verhofstadt when he claimed that the issue of economic migration within Europe has nothing to do with how many refugees we can take.  The reality is that of course it has everything to do with that issue.  When you are taking in over 330,000 new people a year, and that’s just the legal migrants we know about, you have to recognise the difficulties, the pressures on resources,that creates.

The BBC has been trumpeting that ‘A number of Conservative MPs have called for the government to take in more migrants’ trying to create the impression that the world stands in judgement against Cameron, even his own party, but coming up with only two…so they must have had high hopes for this interview…..

Today Jim Naughtie inteviewed Baroness Warsi.(around 08:10)..I’m sure you like me, and Naughtie, might have expected this to go one way as Warsi is well known to be highly critical of Cameron and his Middle East and associated policies.  Wrong.

Warsi was far more circumspect and measured, refusing to be drawn into making emotive statements about accepting unlimited numbers of migrants and the heartlessness of government policy.  Instead she the key was to distinguish between genuine refugees and economic migrants who are effecting the willingness of EU countries to accept refugees.

Naughtie’s interpretation of that was that ‘That must mean we have to take in more [refugees] rather than the obvious take from her words that ‘We should be taking in far fewer EU economic migrants so that resources are freed up to cope with the genuine refugees.’

Curious how the BBC keeps dodging that conclusion….and that Germany, that saviour of the migrants, is deporting what it considers economic migrants…

More than a third of all asylum-seekers arriving in Germany come from Albania, Kosovo and Serbia. Young, poor and disillusioned with their home countries, they are searching for a better future. But almost none of them will be allowed to stay.

Here admitting that economic migrants are ‘blocking’ the refugees….

Migrants from Kosovo are blocking the lodging capacities, “that we urgently need for actual refugee cases”, said Bavarian Internal Affairs Minister Joachim Hermann. Kosovars “unnecessarily cost the state a load of money”, he said.

Warsi made the point that perhaps the most eligible candidates for bringing to the UK are the children who are separated or orphaned  a point made by Toby Young in the Telegraph saying ‘I think the moral case for allowing 1,500 unaccompanied refugee children to settle here is overwhelming. ‘ 

What was interesting in the interview with Warsi was that Naughtie actually raised the suggestion that maybe the answer was to try and deal with the actual cause of the crisis, the conflict in Syria, though he did say ‘not necessarily militarily’.…but that was obviously also in his thoughts, the option was on the table.

Perhaps that is the start of a genuine debate about the causes and the real solution rather than the moral posturing and bullying from the likes of other BBC presenters such as Montague and Livesey and the exploitation of the tragic death of a baby who in reality was a victim of his parent’s bad decision not David Cameron’s ‘cold and heartless’ policies.