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BFMTV host Rachid M’Barki sacked over influence claims linked to ‘Team Jorge’

Posted on February 23, 2023


France’s leading rolling news channel BFMTV on Thursday said it has sacked an anchor after an investigation into alleged external influence in his work.

Rachid M’Barki was sacked this week after the investigation revealed that due editorial process had not been followed in several segments aired between 2021 and 2022, BFMTV’s director general, Marc-Olivier Fogiel, said in a company message.

The segments concerned issues including Russian oligarchs, Qatar and western Sahara. The case was linked to a bid by an Israeli firm dubbed “Team Jorge” to influence elections around the world for clients.

The team was exposed by the Guardian and an international consortium of reporters led by the French non-profit Forbidden Stories.

The channel had opened its inquiry in January into the work of M’Barki, a familiar face on its presenter roster.

In the reports concerned, “these shortcomings were the sole responsibility of one journalist who has not respected the rules in force within the editorial staff”, Fogiel said in the message, seen by Agence France-Presse.

He said the channel had filed a legal complaint – not targeting the journalist personally – over the influence-peddling to which the channel had fallen victim.

The channel would now “further reinforce” its editorial controls, he said.

The Forbidden Stories investigation, carried out by outlets including the Guardian, Le Monde in France, Der Spiegel in Germany and El País in Spain, accused an Israeli firm of seeking to influence more than 30 elections around the world for clients by hacking, sabotage and spreading disinformation.

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The Guardian and Observer have partnered with an international consortium of reporters to investigate global disinformation. Our project, Disinfo black ops, is exposing how false information is deliberately spread by powerful states and private operatives who sell their covert services to political campaigns, companies and wealthy individuals. It also reveals how inconvenient truths can be erased from the internet by those who are rich enough to pay. The investigation is part of Story killers, a collaboration led by Forbidden Stories, a French nonprofit whose mission is to pursue the work of assassinated, threatened or jailed reporters.

The eight-month investigation was inspired by the work of Gauri Lankesh, a 55-year-old journalist who was shot dead outside her Bengaluru home in 2017. Hours before she was murdered, Lankesh had been putting the finishing touches on an article called In the Age of False News, which examined how so-called lie factories online were spreading disinformation in India. In the final line of the article, which was published after her death, Lankesh wrote: “I want to salute all those who expose fake news. I wish there were more of them.”

The Story killers consortium includes more than 100 journalists from 30 media outlets including Haaretz, Le Monde, Radio France, Der Spiegel, Paper Trail Media, Die Zeit, TheMarker and the OCCRP. Read more about this project.

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They said the M’Barki case was only a small example of the extent of its disinformation work. He was suspended on 11 January, just less than a month before the investigation was published.

The investigation said the firm had planted reports on BFMTV about the impact of sanctions against Russia on the yachting industry in Monaco.

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Speaking to Politico at the beginning of February, M’Barki acknowledged using information that had not been through the channel’s usual vetting procedures.

“I’m not ruling anything out. Maybe I was tricked, though it did not feel like it was the case, or that I was taking part in an operation … Otherwise I wouldn’t have done it,” he said.

Le Monde said the items introduced by M’Barki “were part of broader disinformation campaigns orchestrated by Team Jorge”.

It said images and elements of language had been given to M’Barki by a French lobbyist, Jean-Pierre Duthion. Both men insisted there had been no remuneration, it added.

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