Earlier this week, Palestinian Media Watch (PMW) tweeted a video that shows BBC host Anjana Gadgil stating that “the Israeli forces are happy to kill children” during an interview with former Israel Prime Minister Nafatli Bennett.
Gadgil also said that four Palestinian teenagers who were killed in Jenin were “children,” citing the Unitd Nations for this definition.
However, PMW exposed that at least 3 of the 4 “children” were terrorists — belonging to three different terror organizations: Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and Fatah’s terror wing, the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades.
Various terrorist websites posted photos of them posing with automatic rifles. These are the UN and BBC’s “children”:
In the video, PMW invited the BBC to apologize to Israel for defining terrorists as “children”:
To make the teen terrorists look like innocent victims, Fatah’s Commission of Information and Culture posted these three pictures of the teen terrorists:
In addition to PMW’s tweet critical of the BBC and the UN, many organizations sent formal complaints about the BBC broadcaster’s accusation that Israeli forces “are happy to kill children.”
The BBC issued a shameful so-called “apology,” justifying the faulty line of questioning and merely “apologizing” for the “language used”: “While this was a legitimate subject to examine in the interview, we apologize that the language used in this line of questioning was not phrased well and was inappropriate.”
Neither the BBC nor the UN have apologized or admitted that they are creating cover for armed terrorists, and for playing a central role in the Palestinian Authority’s war propaganda, by calling them “children” and blaming Israel for their deaths.
While the death of a child is always tragic, the guilty ones who must be held accountable by the UN and the media, are the Palestinian Authority, who abuse their children and are indoctrinating these young people to fight and seek a martyrdom death.
The author is the Founder and Director of Palestinian Media Watch, where a version of this article first appeared.
The post These Are the Three Teens the Jenin Terrorists Sent to Die first appeared on Algemeiner.com.