But the BBC headline? "Harry warns of 'deeply troubling' rise in antisemitism in UK."
Notice what got cut? The Islamophobia. The subtitle. The line where Harry writes: "anti-Muslim hatred and all forms of racism draw from the same well of division. They must be confronted with the same resolve."
Harry's original piece explicitly rejects hierarchy among forms of hatred. He writes: "When anger is turned toward communities – whether Jewish, Muslim, or any other – it ceases to be a call for justice."
Yet the BBC framing created the very imbalance he warned against. His words got filtered through a lens that prioritised one form of bigotry over another, even when the source material demanded equal treatment.
Read the original article here: https://www.newstatesman.com/comment/2026/05/my-fears-for-a-divided-kingdom
Compare it to the BBC coverage: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c8xw55q0elvo
This isn't about diminishing antisemitism. It's about exposing how the establishment's selective attention distorts even messages meant to promote unity. When the BBC chooses which suffering to amplify, they're not just reporting, they're shaping the hierarchy.
All bigotry deserves equal condemnation. Not just when it fits the narrative.
#Islamophobia #Antisemitism #MediaFraming #SelectiveOutrage #PrinceHarry


