On Oct. 12,
Agence France-Presse (AFP) ― one of the world's 'big three' wire
agencies ― opened its report on the IDF's Gaza operation with
this:
Israel's massive military operation into the northern Gaza
Strip shows no sign of a let-up after two deadly weeks that have
seen 111 Palestinians killed, mainly children,
and Qassam rockets still being fired into Israeli territory.
'Mainly children' killed?
The New York Times reported a short time beforehand:
In 11 days of fighting in the northern Gaza Strip, Israeli forces
have killed at least 90 Palestinians, including about 55 militants
and 35 civilians, according to Palestinian hospital officials. The
dead include 18 Palestinians who were 16 or younger,
according to a count by The Associated Press.
So Palestinian and press sources had acknowledged that the vast
majority of Palestinian dead were adults and/or 'militants' ― not, as
AFP reported, children.
This is not an insignificant detail ― the inaccuracy pertains to a
highly sensitive issue, and was erroneously reported in the first
line of AFP's dispatch. As such, it sets a condemnatory tone
regarding the entire IDF anti-terror operation in Gaza.
HonestReporting
spoke with the AFP news editor in Jerusalem just minutes after the
error appeared. AFP's editor acknowledged the statement was wrong and
said that a correction was forthcoming.
Surprisingly, AFP did not issue a correction. AFP's subsequent
report that day on Gaza simply did not contain the erroneous phrase ―
but gave no indication to local editors that the previous
version was wrong and should not be published.
In news reports, as anywhere, mistakes happen. Accepted
journalistic standards dictate that in such cases, the news outlet
issues a timely, prominent correction. This ensures that other
news outlets avoid reprinting the fiction, and may issue corrections
of their own in the event that the error was already reprinted.
By failing to issue such a correction, AFP deviated from standard
journalistic procedure. In a follow-up conversation today (Oct. 14),
AFP's Jerusalem news editor acknowledged to HonestReporting that
'maybe we should have done so' ― but does not intend to issue a proper
correction.
The 'product' that any news outlet sells is its accuracy and
fairness. With a mistake like this, compounded by the failure to
correct the record, news consumers must wonder about Agence
France-Presse's credibility in covering this conflict.