Gaza: silenced in the name of impartiality
Fri 17 April 2026
10:30
Free
Calculating distance...
In the context of the war on Gaza and ongoing conflicts across the Middle East, journalists face growing pressure to conform to standards of impartiality that are increasingly used to silence reporting rather than ensure accuracy. Under the guise of “balance”, coverage may obscure critical facts, restrict narratives, or penalise reporters who speak out on uncomfortable realities.
International media organisations, particularly those producing Arabic-language coverage for the Middle East, have increasingly operated under political pressure that affects fair and independent reporting. Journalists from Lebanon and Palestine working within these institutions have faced suspensions, disciplinary measures, or loss of employment, often following accusations of antisemitism linked to their coverage of Israel and Gaza. Similar patterns have emerged across major outlets, including the BBC and DW, raising serious concerns about newsroom independence and editorial freedom. More recently, the BBC has introduced internal training guidelines that caution journalists against certain forms of criticism related to Zionism, further illustrating how editorial frameworks can shape and limit fair coverage.
This panel will examine firsthand experiences, including the suspension of Nada Abdelsamad at BBC Arabic and the experience of Farah Maraqa in addition to sustained attacks on Diana Moukalled, to highlight the personal, professional, and ethical costs journalists pay for speaking out during war. Participants will discuss how such pressures weaken investigative journalism, undermine public trust, and contribute to self-censorship, while also exploring strategies for reclaiming narrative power, maintaining credibility, and defending ethical journalism in the Middle East and beyond.
Key questions:
> How is impartiality used as a tool to silence journalists covering Gaza and the Middle East?
> What personal and professional costs do journalists face for speaking out during war?
> How do accusations and internal editorial policies shape newsroom culture and reporting limits?
> How can journalists reclaim credibility and narrative agency under institutional pressure?
Why this session matters:
This panel highlights the human and professional costs of impartiality being misused to silence critical reporting, especially in the context of Gaza and broader Middle East conflicts. Bringing together journalists who have experienced these pressures firsthand, the session will engage journalists, editors, media scholars, and advocates in a vital discussion about the ethics of war reporting, press freedom and narrative accountability.
Moderated by Ghousoun Bisharat.
Organised in association with Daraj Media.
Modified more than a month ago