BBC
Censors Video Showing Syrian Rebels Forcing Prisoner to Become
Suicide Bomber
The
BBC has sensationally censored a news story and a video showing
Syrian rebels forcing a prisoner to become a suicide bomber, a war
crime under the Geneva Conventions, presumably because it reflected
badly on establishment media efforts to portray the FSA as glorious
freedom fighters
23
August, 2012
The
video, a copy of which can be viewed above (the original BBC version
was deleted), shows Free Syrian Army rebels preparing a bomb that is
loaded onto the back of a truck to be detonated at a government
checkpoint in the city of Aleppo.
The
clip explains how the rebels have commandeered an apartment belonging
to a Syrian police captain. The rebels are seen sneering at photos of
the police captain’s family while they proclaim, “Look at their
freedom, look how good it is,” while hypocritically enjoying the
luxury of the man’s swimming pool.
The
video then shows a prisoner who the rebels claim belonged to a
pro-government militia. Bruises from torture on the prisoner’s body
are explained away as having been metered out by the man’s previous
captors. The BBC commentary emphasizes how well the rebels are
treating the man, showing them handing him a cigarette.
However,
the man has been tricked into thinking he is part of a prisoner
exchange program when in reality he is being set up as an unwitting
suicide bomber. The prisoner is blindfolded and told to drive the
truck towards a government checkpoint.
“What
he doesn’t know is that the truck is the one that’s been rigged
with a 300 kilo bomb,” states the narrator.
The
clip then shows rebels returning disappointed after it’s revealed
that the remote detonator failed and the bomb did not explode.
The
BBC narrator admits that forcing prisoners to become suicide bombers
“would certainly be considered a war crime.”
New
York Times reporters who shot the video claim they had no knowledge
of the plot. A longer version of the clip is posted on the New
York Times You Tube channel. The
title of the clip glorifies the rebel fighters as “The Lions of
Tawhid”.
Within
hours of the story being published, it was subsequently sent down the
memory by the BBC. Attempts to reach the original
article URL are
greeted with a 404 Not Found page.
In
addition, a You Tube version of the same video originally posted on
the official BBC News 2012 channel was also removed. Although the You
Tube page for the video states that it was removed after a “copyright
claim by British Broadcasting Corporation” this is a bogus reason,
because the video was not uploaded by a third party, it was posted on
the official
BBC channel,
as the screenshot below proves.
“Copyright
claim” is a bogus reason for the video’s removal because it
originally appeared on the official BBC News Channel, and was not
uploaded by a third party.
It
seems clear that the only reason for the video to be removed would be
because senior BBC news editors felt the story reflected badly on the
propaganda campaign to characterize the Syrian rebels as venerable
and proud freedom fighters, when
in reality as we have documented they
have been guilty of massacres, kidnappings, torture and other acts of
brutality.
This
represents a clear effort to hide evidence of Syrian rebels, who
the Obama
administration recently pledged to support with
taxpayer dollars, engaged in war crimes.
In
addition, the fact that the rebels, under
the direction of Al-Qaeda fighters,
are building bombs and carrying out terrorist attacks is something
the NATO-aligned media is keen not to emphasize.
This
is by no means the first time the BBC has been caught manipulating
the news in an effort to propagandize for western military
involvement in Syria.
Back
in May we exposed how
the BBC has used a years-old photo of dead Iraqi children to depict
victims of an alleged government assault in the town of Houla.
The
photographer who took the original picture, Marco Di Lauro, posted on
his Facebook page, “Somebody is using my images as a propaganda
against the Syrian government to prove the massacre.” Di
Lauro told the London Telegraph he
was “astonished” the BBC had failed to check to authenticity of
the image.
Should
the copy at the top of this article also be deleted, an alternate
version of the BBC video with added commentary under fair use is
embedded below.
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