BBC ‘Fixes’ Munich Killer Article following Breitbart Exposé of Muslim Name Cover-Up

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has corrected its coverage of Munich killer Ali David Sonbaly following a Breitbart London exposé of how the global media giant was attempting to hide the murderers Muslim name.

Despite sources outwardly rejecting any link to radical Islam, the BBC still felt it necessary, in isolation, to scrub any reference to the name “Ali” in the killer’s name. The organisation chose to report his name as “David Sonbaly” on social media, on broadcast TV, and in its online coverage.

After Breitbart London reported the news, which subsequently featured on the powerful news aggregation site the Drudge Report, the BBC began to quietly alter its coverage.

The chyron on its broadcast news segments was quickly changed to add in “Ali”, and the original article was edited to include the name as his middle name. The BBC also added the line: “He has also been referred to as Ali David Sonboly, or David S.”

Despite the alteration, the BBC has still not responded to a Breitbart London request for comment on the story.

We asked almost two hours before the ehange:

Dear Sir or Madam,

Could the BBC please explain the decision to only refer to Munich killer Ali David Sonboly as “David Sonboly”?

This is a pattern across online, broadcast, and social media and therefore leads me to believe this decision was taken at a very high level.

Could you please let me know who took this decision and when, and why?

I will be publishing on this shortly.

Kind regards,

Raheem Kassam
Editor in Chief
Breitbart London

The updated BBC article does not contain a correction or explanation for their editing.

BBC news anchors are, as of 3pm EST on Saturday afternoon, still referring to the killer as “David Sonboly.”

Raheem Kassam is a Shillman-Ginsburg fellow at the Middle East Forum and editor-in-chief of Breitbart London.

Raheem Kassam is the former editor-in-chief of Breitbart London. From a Muslim family, he is devoted to combating radical Islam and exposing anti-Western activists and trends. He is credited with the downfall of Baroness Jenny Tonge and Liberal Democrat MP David Ward. In 2012, Mr. Kassam broke the Muslim Patrols story that made international headlines, and he has had a steady stream of other noteworthy media stories. He is the former chief of staff to UKIP leader Nigel Farage. He founded the counter-extremism watchdog Student Rights and served as the communications director at the Henry Jackson Society. He co-launched The Commentator website as well as founding TrendingCentral.com. He is featured regularly on the BBC, Sky News, Channel 4, Al Jazeera, and many other television channels and has been an op-ed contributor for publications such as the Wall Street Journal, Daily Telegraph, Jewish Chronicle, and Times of Israel.
See more from this Author
See more on this Topic