The Centre for Media Monitoring (CfMM) analysed almost 11,000 news articles, written in the final quarter of 2018, using 50 keywords related to Muslims and Islam.
The majority of British media coverage negatively portrays Muslims, a groundbreaking report has found.
The Centre for Media Monitoring (CfMM) analysed almost 11,000 news articles, written in the final quarter of 2018, using 50 keywords related to Muslims and Islam.
The group found that 59 percent of stories “associated Muslims with negative behaviours” and that terrorism was the most common theme.
The Daily Mail’s Australian arm ran the highest proportion of articles that were rated “very biased.”
The Spectator, which Conservative leadership contender Boris Johnson used to edit, came third.
The magazine was criticised for an interview in which a conservative commentator claimed: “There are Muslims who want to come and get me for my Jewish blood.”
Overall the right-wing and religious press were the most hostile towards Muslims.
Christian Today, ranked as the second-most biased title in the study, ran a headline: “The European Church is sleeping while Islam is creeping in, says African bishop.”
The BBC drama Bodyguard was also heavily criticised for pandering to “stereotypes of Muslim women.” The series was watched by an average of over 10 million viewers.
BBC Newsnight was also flagged for using far-right hate leader Stephen Yaxley-Lennon’s own image of himself being “gagged.”
Regional TV stations emerged as providing some of the most balanced coverage, particularly of local hate crimes against Muslims and the rise of the far-right.
ITV Yorkshire North was praised for giving “regional insight into the national problem of hate crimes and featured Muslim voices prominently.”
The New Statesman, iNews and the Metro were found to have the highest percentage of articles that had a “supportive bias” towards Muslims.
The Morning Star’s coverage was not included in the study.
The report will be launched in Parliament tonight by Labour MPs Naz Shah and Yasmin Qureshi.
Express editor-in-chief Gary Jones and Bishop of Chelmsford Stephen Cottrell are also expected to attend.
The CfMM is a newly formed unit of the Muslim Council of Britain and plans to continue publishing research on the issue.
Report co-author Faisal Hanif said: “As the first in a series of quarterly reports, CfMM hopes that by highlighting examples of coverage on Muslims and Islam, this can serve as a valuable resource for journalists and editors alike.”
The center’s director Rizwana Hamid highlighted the goals of the newly formed team: “There is no doubt about the seriousness of Islamophobia within sections of British media.
“Even amongst the public, 58 percent believe the media is to blame for Islamophobia. The status quo has to change.
“Our goal is for there to be more responsible for reporting through constructive dialogue with decision-makers.
Lancaster University linguistics expert Paul Baker said the report was “impressive.”
He said: “For the first time, we can get a complete sense of the picture of media reporting on Islam in the UK.”
IPA Service / Courtesy: Morning Star