On May 21, 2008, the
French Court of Appeals found in favor of Philippe Karsenty,
the head of the media watchdog group Media
Ratings, by overturning a lower court decision that found
Karsenty had libeled France-2 TV and its Jerusalem Bureau Chief Charles
Enderlin when he accused them of knowingly misleading the world about
the death of a Palestinian child (Muhammad al-Dura) in the Gaza Strip in
September 2000.
In the footage used by
France-2 in its report, both father and son are shown crouching against
a wall following which there is a cut to an apparently dead boy lying in
his father's arms. The clip does not show the child being shot although
a voice-over by Enderlin (who was not on the scene at the time) informs
viewers that the boy had been shot to death by the Israelis.
But from
an analysis of all the data from the scene including the location of the
IDF position, the trajectory of the bullets, the location of the father
and the son behind a barrier, the cadence of the bullet fire, the angle
at which the bullets penetrated the wall behind them, the hours of the
events, and the fact that only seven bullet holes can be seen behind the
al-Duras despite repeated statements by the Palestinian cameraman that
the child survived forty-five minutes of continuous gunfire from Israeli
forces - all the evidence suggested that the bullet that apparently
killed the child could not have been fired by IDF soldiers but was
almost certainly fired from Palestinian positions, if in fact, the
boy had been shot at all. It transpired that the Palestinians
that day had deliberately "created" many other scenes for the cameras.
[1] As David
Gelernter writing in the Los Angeles Times (September 9, 2005)
reminds us about video lies: "A boy named Mohammed al Dura did die in a
Gaza hospital that day, (but) his face doesn't match the face in the
(France-2) video.”
Subsequent
investigations proved that the France-2 TV film broadcast on September
20, 2000 had been significantly doctored.
Video taken by other photographers at the time showed passersby walking
unconcernedly between the al-Duras crouching behind a concrete barrel
and the Israeli position from which the bullets were supposedly fired.
As Denis Jeambar, editor-in-chief of the French news weekly l'Express,
and filmmaker Daniel Leconte, who saw raw, unedited video of the
shooting taken by the France-2 network noted: "If they had been Israeli
bullets, they would be very strange bullets because they would have
needed to go around the corner." The last frames - which come after
the heart-rending sequence that concluded the broadcast version - show
the "dead” boy moving his arm and opening his eyes
in front of the camera after he had
been "killed”.
In 2004, Karsenty
published an article calling for the resignation of Enderlin and another
France-2 employee for staging the Al-Dura boy's death. France-2 sued
Karsenty for libel and won the case in October, 2006. Karsenty’s lawyer
had asked that the court rule in favor of Karsenty in light of the
evidence that had been provided, but the court found him guilty of
libel. Enderlin and France-2 were awarded symbolic damages of one euro
each, and Karsenty was ordered to pay a small fine and court costs.
Karsenty, however, demanded justice. He
appealed the court decision and the Appeals Court overturned the libel
decision. The al-Dura "tragedy" has finally been exposed as another
piece of tragic Palestinian street theater with the Arab
propaganda machine being enabled, magnified, and laundered by the
international media.
Unfortunately, justice
delayed is now justice denied. The story of the apparent 55-second
filmed death of the 12-year old became the symbol of the second
Palestinian intifada and the fallout from the al-Dura lie has had
global implications. Millions of TV viewers witnessed the al-Dura
child’s "death" and heard the accusation that the Israelis had caused
it. Overnight, al-Dura became the symbol of Palestinian suffering, the
Palestinian martyr whose blood had to be avenged by the Muslim and
Western world and Israel would pay dearly for it. As Nidra Poller wrote
in the March 2004 issue of Commentary:” Wafa Samir al-Bis, an
aspiring twenty-one-year-old shahida, or "martyr," was
apprehended by Israeli guards at the Erez checkpoint in Gaza and found
to be carrying 20 pounds of explosives in her underwear. The young woman
intended to make a last trip to the Soroka Medical Center in Be'er Sheva
where she had been receiving medical treatment for severe burns incurred
in a domestic accident. Her goal this time was to blow herself up and
kill as many young people as possible. Asked why she was aiming
specifically at children, she replied that she wanted to retaliate for
the death of Muhammad al-Dura.”
Nor was she alone. Al Dura’s death turned into a blood libel
accompanied by terror and violence, and it has become the altar upon
which Israel is to be sacrificed.
The images of the
father bobbing back and forth over the body of his dead child quickly
became a symbol used by Arabs to fan the flames of anti-Israel hatred
and to reinforce the Palestinian "struggle” against the Israeli
"occupation”. Streets, squares, and schools
have since been named for the young Islamic shahid. His death
scene has been replicated on postage stamps and has even made an iconic
appearance in the video of Daniel Pearl's beheading. In the immediate
aftermath of the al-Dura incident, two Israeli reservists were lynched
and mutilated in Ramallah by Arab rioters screaming al-Dura’s name. Bin
Laden even referred to the al-Dura incident in a post 9/11 video. A
doctored photo was produced for Arab-Muslim viewers featuring a
superimposed image of an Israeli soldier shooting the boy at close
range. The Arab League dedicated October 1st as the Day of
Arab Children in honor of Muhammad al-Dura and Iran named more than
one hundred and fifty schools after the boy.
The al Dura blood libel has accounted for countless murals and wall
posters, an al-Qaeda recruiting video and even an epic Palestinian poem
by Mahmoud Darwish. The world has been flooded with pictures of the dead
child and the gullible international media published headlines that
read: "Israel murders Palestinian children." If it bleeds; it reads,
especially if Israel is deemed the perpetrator.
The al Dura hoax has
reinforced one of Europe's most cherished assumptions - that Israel was,
is and remains a vicious Nazi-like entity that deliberately murders
Palestinian children. Polls conducted in Europe after the al Dura
"slaughter" identified Israel as the greatest threat to world peace,
greater than Iran, North Korea, Pakistan and Syria. The case has become
one of the pillars upon which these assumptions relied. The fact that it
was all a vicious lie is irrelevant. The harm has already been done.
The al-Dura frenzy has become part of an
insidious campaign in which Western media outlets have allowed
themselves to be manipulated by dishonest, politically motivated sources
as was the case with the 2002 Jenin "massacre" that never was, the
doctored Reuters photographs from Israel's war against Hezbollah in
2006, the "murder" of Rachel Corrie, the "apartheid wall" allegations
and the Hamas-directed humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
In Greek mythology,
Pandora opened a box that contained all the evils of mankind - greed,
vanity, slander, envy and lying. The al Dura
case stands as testament that once evil have been released, it is
impossible to control it. There is no way to undo the damage that has
been inflicted on Israel's international image by the France-2 TV report
or to restore the lives of the Israeli and Jewish victims destroyed as
vengeance for al-Dura’s "death." Lies can kill, and in this case, they
have.
Endnote
1) Israeli
commentator Amnon Lord's account of the larger scene at Netzarim
Junction when the boy was supposedly shot to death describes
"incongruous battle scenes complete with wounded combatants and
screeching ambulances played out in front of an audience of laughing
onlookers, while makeshift movie directors do retakes of botched
scenes."