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The BBC have replied to me and it's the sort of reply that the BBC specialise in:
Dear Sir/Madam,world-middle-east-18582746) is intended as a
The article you cite
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
succinct overview of the challenges facing the Egyptian president.
After reviewing the article, we do not believe that we have
misrepresented President Mursi's statements and interviews on relations
with Israel and the US. We do not agree that stating that one party's
honouring of an agreement depends on the other party doing the same is
open to interpretations. The passage you quote from our article -
"Mursi is careful to qualify his statements and say that Egypt's
acceptance of the peace agreement depends on Israel's honouring of this
agreement" - is in fact a reasonable paraphrasing of Mr Mursi's own view
of the challenges facing his administration with regard to Camp David, as
outlined in the passage you cite from his televised pre-election
interview.
Regards,
BBC Monitoring
I have responded:
Dear BBC Monitoring
I am sorry but your response just doesn't properly answer my complaint.
Someone reading the original BBC article, with no other information to go on, would be lead to believe that President Mursi wants to respect and honour the peace treaty with Israel; no doubts, no queries, no conditions. In fact there is ample evidence from President Mursi's own mouth that his definition of respecting and honour the peace treaty is not quite what an innocent reader might expect.
President Mursi said in a televised interview before the elections that Israel's honouring the agreement meant making peace with all the peoples of the region, implementing the Palestinians' right of return, and establishing a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital. The second and third of those conditions are somewhat controversial to the Israelis, to say the least.
By ignoring the conditions that President Mursi openly puts on his honouring and respecting Egypt's peace treaty with Israel, the BBC misrepresents President Mursi's position and makes his position seem more reasonable than it actually is.
Please reconsider your initial response to me.
Regards
NotaSheep MaybeaGoat
Let's see what they have to say this time...
The BBC will say that on balance "we got it about right" as it almost always does when challenged about anything at all. Even so, best of luck on this one and more strength to your elbow - you'll need it.
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