Ofcom sanctions BBC after ‘serious breach of broadcasting rules over Gaza documentary’

File photo dated 21/01/2020 of BBC Broadcasting House in London. Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has said she asked the BBC why nobody has been fired for airing a Gaza documentary which featured the son of a Hamas official. This comes ahead of a review looking into Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone, which is reportedly set to be published next week. Issue date: Saturday July 5, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Ian West/PA Wire
‘We are directing the BBC to broadcast a statement of our findings,’ Ofcom said (Picture: Ian West/PA Wire)

Ofcom has confirmed that the BBC made a ‘serious breach of their rules’ over a documentary about the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

The film Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone was originally released in February this year.

The documentary was narrated by a 13-year-old boy, who was later discovered to be the son of a Hamas official.

In a new statement released today, Ofcom outlined: ‘As this represents a serious breach of our rules, we are directing the BBC to broadcast a statement of our findings against it on BBC2 at 21:00, with a date to be confirmed.’

The media regulator stated that the documentary ‘broke broadcasting rules which state that factual programmes must not materially mislead the audience’.

The statement continued: ‘Our investigation found that the programme’s failure to disclose that the narrator’s father held a position in the Hamas-run administration was materially misleading.

‘It meant that the audience did not have critical information which may have been highly relevant to their assessment of the narrator and the information he provided.’

Ofcom emphasised that ‘trust is at the heart of the relationship between a broadcaster and its audience, particularly for a public service broadcaster such as the BBC’.

Therefore, the broadcaster’s failure to disclose the connection that the narrator has to Hamas ‘had the potential to erode the significantly high levels of trust that audiences would have placed in a BBC factual programme about the Israel-Gaza war’.

On Ofcom’s website, it says that the watchdog ‘may impose a sanction if we consider that a broadcaster has seriously, deliberately, repeatedly or recklessly breached one of our requirements’.

More to follow.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *