In February 2002 the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) along with other
international broadcast networks reported on the outbreak of communal violence
in Godhra, in the Indian state of Gujarat.
From the BBC report one would have got the impression that Hindus were not even
victims of the violence. Instead Hindus were blamed for the violence which
affected all communities. It is a sad indictment of a one time respected
international news corporation that the BBC would target Hindus this way.
However it was far from unique or out of character. In reporting the
secessionist terrorism in Kashmir, the BBC has
long been sympathetic to the terrorists, refusing to even call them
‘terrorist’. Why? Because the victims of the terror are Hindus. Indeed the BBC
averts its gaze from the indigenous inhabitants of Kashmir
who to this day languish in refugee camps simply because they are Hindu. The
BBC pays at best lip service to the ethnic cleansing and genocide of Hindus
from Kashmir.
As hinted at this is far from an isolated occurrence. Only this year the
director-general Mark Thomson candidly admitted that some faiths and
communities get more favourable and sensitive treatment than others, and that
the broadcasting behemoth has to consider the possibility of violent threats
should it push ahead with certain types of programme. So there you have it,
plain and open. With this knowledge the inherently anti-Hindu nature of
the BBC becomes clear and there are many examples of this bigotry and
colonialist racist mindset to choose from. In fact they are legion.
In 2003 at the Hindu Youth UK festival the BBC sent one of its token brown face
Indian governors to lecture the youth on how Hindu extremism was a threat in
India turning it into a Hindutva Fascist state .When asked to provide proof of
this by HHR and why the BBC never reports on human rights abuses on Kashmiri
Hindus or Bangladeshi Hindus he reacted in the usual function by looking for
the nearest exit and developing a sudden inability to speak.
In 2005 HHR was asked by BBC Radio 4 to participate in research for an upcoming
programme about the commonality shared between different faith communities. It
did not take long to transpire that they actually were trying to highlight
differences. When HHR did not cooperate the result was an abusive, arrogant
rant down the telephone by the programme’s producer, upset at not having found
her pliable ‘Gunga Din’ guinea pig.
In 2007 HHR was asked for its input into the BBC World Service programme about
religion. Having initially refused because of allegations that HHR was funded
by the BJP and RSS (which actually fund and are linked to NHSF, not that is
exactly a big secret anyway), the BBC retracted and then became rather more
inviting.
Nevertheless as soon as I walked into the interview the whole conversation was
moulded around making HHR look extremist. Accusations of damaging MF
Hussain’s paintings were refuted without much difficulty, considering that
HHR’s protest was peaceful. Next on being asked my own beliefs, I said there
was much enrichment from looking at Sufi poetry and Jewish Kabbalah. Yet this
brought indignation as most Hindus would apparently not agree. So in a few
minutes I moved from being boxed as a narrow-minded extremist and a
broad-minded ‘progressive’, both of which were problematic. No surprise that my
entire interview was shelved as HHR was not deemed extremist enough.
Fortunately they found another well known UK Hindu Organisation to be desperate
enough for fame that they became the necessary broadcast fodder to ‘prove’ the
existence of Hindu extremism later which later on resulted with their
front man wrongly portrayed as a Hindu Fuhrer with connections with the VHP in
a widely published British Newspaper.
Above all it was the treatment of the Indian Guru Sathya Sai Baba in the BBC’s
‘Secret Swami’ which was the apex of all its anti-Hindu ideology. First
broadcast in 2004, the television documentary vilified one of India’s most
revered holy men as money grabbing child abusing sex pest. HHR complained within
the time limits set by the BBC’s own procedures. But the BBC claimed to have
not seen these emails and hence the complaint was dismissed as being outside
the time period. In 2011(?) the programme was refered to in a series on
articles on Sathya Sai Baba passing away. HHR again complained but was told it
should have complained back in 2004.
When the proof was provided that it actually had the BBC Trust in its appeal
them moved the goal posts to dismiss it anyway. Yet the BBC still earns
royalties from selling this programme abroad and ensuring that it is seen as
gospel truth.
The accusations against Satya Sai Baba have particular poignancy. Soon after
the death of Baba, one of the BBC most loved, respected and famous figures also
left his earthly abode. Jimmy Savile (coincidentally born 1926 and passed away
2011 same years as Sathya Sai Baba) was known to millions not just as a radio
DJ and television presenter, but as a tireless campaigner in raising millions
for charity, most notably the Stoke Mandeville hospital for children.
Savile also raised the recognition of Broadmoor in tackling mental health
issues and worked unpaid as a hospital porter. Yet only a year after his death
explosive revelations astounded the public. For decades Savile had used his
position of celebrity, trust and charity work to beguile to public just so that
he could prey on society’s most vulnerable. Teenage girls, boys even younger,
and hospital patients were subject to his vicious and unrelenting sexual
predatory behaviour for decades totaling around 4-5 hundred alleged victims.
The BBC colluded in his efforts as he held a vice grip over them and was
allegedly allowed to run a child sex ring with total impunity within BBC
premises . Savilegate was however just the tip of the iceberg. In 2001 veteran
BBC broadcaster Jonathan King was sentenced to prison due to getting away with
years of child abuse. A brash, arrogant character, King like Savile regarded
himself as untouchable. Since Savilegate broke other BBC presenters and entertainers
like Freddie Starr, John Peel and Dave Lee Travis have been dragged into the
melee, especially as Savile’s collusion in child abuse with Gary Glitter has
been revealed.So the BBC has more secrets within it’s dark walls than the
secrets it makes upon others .
If we compare the lives of Savile and Satya Sai Baba it makes an interesting
contrast. The former used his fake concern for the vulnerable to gain
aristocratic status in the BBC so that he could rape and abuse at random. He
was the BBC’s original superstar so much so that it was blasphemous to speak
ill of him in the suffocating totalitarian environment. Then there is Sathya
Sai Baba who with scant recognition from the BBC has provided fresh water to
some of India’s poorest villages as well as high-tech medical care and first
class education to poverty stricken millions for decades and his followers
continue his social work programmes across the country and abroad. Notice the
contrast ?.
Where the allegations of child abuse against Sathya Sai Baba have been
unsubstantiated and even retracted, the BBC continues to recycle the old
hatred. Yet the very person the BBC promoted as a selfless worker for charity
has turned out to have been a serial sex pest who molested and raped for
decades with the full knowledge of the BBC.
When Lord Patten, chairman of the BBC Trust, speaks of rebuilding confidence
with the public, he should perhaps start with this basic anomaly and set the
record straight on Sathya Sai Baba and help end to all other Hindu Bashing that
the BBC continues to indulge in because it doesn’t look good on the image of
the UK when we have British ministers traveling to India hoping to boost trade
but at the same time its own media is busy looking at the ‘Hindoo’ through a
colonial lens in a country that is a ‘Hindu’ majority.Or like some believers
would say after seeing the events with the BBC, that Karma has a good way to
catch up sooner or later.
http://www.hinduhumanrights.info/even-the-bbcs-hindu-bashing-has-some-karma/