CJPME Holds Toronto Star Accountable for Misleading Oct. 7 Coverage

On March 12, 2025, CJPME media analyst Anthony Issa submitted a formal letter to Toronto Star, challenging its misleading framing of the October 7 attacks in an article titled “Toronto police apologize to Jewish community after backlash to podcast episode”. The letter criticized the article’s opening claim that On Oct. 7, Hamas attacked a music festival in Israel, which falsely suggested that the Nova music festival was the primary target of the attack.

Following CJPME’s intervention, Toronto Star revised the passage to acknowledge that the attack occurred at multiple locations.

The updated version reads:

“On Oct. 7, Hamas attacked a music festival in Israel. A total of 1,200 people were killed and 250 abducted in the attack that day that included other locations including several communities.”

While this correction is a step in the right direction, the article still misleads readers by maintaining the festival as the primary reference point. As reported by Haaretz, Israeli security officials have acknowledged that Hamas did not plan in advance to attack the festival but only learned of it during the assault.

Although the framing is still misleading by overly focusing the events of Oct. 7 on the Nova music festival, we believe this outcome highlights the importance of our work in pushing for proper for ongoing media accountability in Canadian news coverage of Palestine.

CJPME remains committed to ensuring that Canadian media does not distort Israel’s brutal military siege and genocide on the Gaza strip following the events of Oct. 7.