Several BBC journalists resigned from the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) after being asked to wear colors of the Palestinian flag or a keffiyeh, a scarf synonymous with pro-Palestinian and Hamas support, in a move deemed “hypocritical and antisemitic.”
A number of BBC staff members have quit the NUJ after receiving a directive encouraging workers to “wear something red, green, black, or a Palestinian keffiyeh,” according to a Jewish News report.
Tomorrow, the UK's National Union of Journalists is encouraging its members to "wear something red, green, black or a Palestinian keffiyeh to visibly show solidarity" with Palestinians.
— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) November 27, 2024
So much for objective reporting on Israel from British journalists.https://t.co/0Q1mYThgxw pic.twitter.com/p6aFittRgO
The request, sent jointly by the NUJ and the Trades Union Congress (TUC), was part of a “Day of Action for Palestine” aimed at supporting a ceasefire in Gaza, a move that would undoubtedly cement Hamas’s hold on power.
Today we show solidarity in the workplace with the horrendous situation in Gaza.
— Trades Union Congress (@The_TUC) November 28, 2024
Thousands of Palestinians - mainly women and children - have been killed by Israeli military operations and many more are injured.
We need an immediate and permanent ceasefire, an end to the… pic.twitter.com/DTk9jZMWBt
Critics within the BBC called the action a violation of the broadcaster’s impartiality standards.
“BBC journalists, who pride themselves on impartiality and who fought to keep their NUJ free of politics, are being encouraged to break the BBC’s editorial guidelines by supporting a political cause,” one staff member told Jewish News, Britain’s largest Jewish newspaper, adding that the move is both “hypocritical and antisemitic.”
'To wear the Palestinian flag or an Arabic scarf, that just tells you which side they're on.'
— GB News (@GBNEWS) November 27, 2024
Former BBC Journalist, Danny Kelly, criticises the BBC for their 'terrible optics' in urging staff to wear colours of the Palestinian flag to work. pic.twitter.com/dKOiUaP32F
Freelance journalist Charlotte Henry, who resigned from the NUJ, stated she could no longer be part of a union that has become “hostile” to Jews.
In response to the backlash, the NUJ clarified that public service broadcasters like the BBC must adhere to impartiality rules and avoid breaches of social media guidelines.
Why doesn't the @BBC staff just wear their bias on their shoulders? Oh, sorry, they are.https://t.co/GrOkNBqmVW pic.twitter.com/VNIGsBUq6f
— Canary Mission (@canarymission) November 27, 2024
The controversy comes amid ongoing scrutiny of BBC’s coverage of the Israel-Hamas conflict, with recent research by British lawyer Trevor Asserson finding over 1,500 instances of editorial guideline breaches and accusations of anti-Israel bias dominating the findings.
BBC under fire for anti-Israel bias on the current war, with 'Hamas, a proscribed terrorist organization, more likely to be described as a health ministry than a terrorist organization'
— i24NEWS English (@i24NEWS_EN) September 9, 2024
Trevor Asserson, who led the research project, joins @benitalevin for a special interview: pic.twitter.com/QDjtj2ORYa
This incident highlights ongoing concerns over impartiality and political expression in mainstream media, with more resignations from the NUJ expected in the coming days.
Joshua Klein is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at