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The Media Accountability Project  

Pages tagged "Death Toll"


CBC News finally acknowledges the majority of Palestinian deaths are women and children after months of CJPME Advocacy

After months of advocacy, CBC News published a recent article acknowledging that while the Gaza Ministry of Health does not explicitly differentiate between combatants and non-combatants, the majority of Palestinians killed during Israel’s ongoing genocidal campaign in Gaza are women and children.

For months, CJPME media analysts have expressed concerns about media outlets stating that the Gaza Ministry of Health "does not distinguish between combatants and civilians." This framing is misleading, as it casts unnecessary doubt on the extent of civilian deaths. The data confirms that the overwhelming majority are civilians (women, children, and elderly). The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) uses the Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) and makes clear distinctions between men, women, children, and the elderly in its reports. Below is a graph from UNOCHA, last updated on October 7th, that illustrates these distinctions:

Unlike other outlets, CBC News has shown a willingness to engage with our journalistic ethics concerns and adjust its reporting accordingly. This represents a significant step forward in achieving more accurate and responsible journalism.


Thanks for accurate reporting on occupied Gaza’s death toll from Israel's genocide

"This tactic, known as the “Dahiye Doctrine,” originated in the Dahiya neighborhood of Beirut, where the Israeli Offensive Forces conducted devastating assaults during the 2006 war against Lebanon. This resulted in nearly 1,000 civilian casualties, a third of whom were children, alongside widespread destruction of essential civilian infrastructure. General Gadi Eisenkot, then Chief of Israeli Northern Command, justified these actions by stating, 'These are not civilian villages; they are military bases.'" 

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Concerns over misleading framing of indigenous rally as "anti-Israel"

The obvious and indisputable reality is that students were attending a Grassy Narrows protest, and as is common at indigenous rallies in Canada, chants were made in solidarity with Palestinians. To state that students were brought to an “anti-Israel” protest is false, sensationalist, and a violation of basic journalistic standards of accuracy according to the Canadian Association of Journalists. You are writing not as a columnist, but as a journalist, and it is necessary to correct this mistake in order to meet the standards to which you are tied.

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Please specify that UNOCHA categorizes Palestinian civilian deaths by providing distinct breakdowns for women, children, and the elderly

The chart below is taken from the September 18, 2024 UNOCHA update on the situation in Gaza. As you can clearly see, distinctions are clearly made between 4 categories, where the majority of Palestinians killed in Gaza by Israel are women, children, and the elderly. As such, the assertion that the “ministry of health does not distinguish between combatants and civilians” gives the misleading impression that the death toll is primarily composed of combatants, when in fact the majority are civilians.

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Please specify that UNOCHA categorizes Palestinian civilian into women, children, and the elderly

"Nowhere does the UNOCHA provide the qualification that your article does. UNOCHA uses the MoH breakdown, which is not explicitly between fighters and civilians, but distinguishes between men, children, women, and the elderly. Based on the article’s claim that the MoH does not distinguish between civilians and fighters, many readers would be surprised to learn that they do make these other related distinctions."

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