Fact Sheet

Terror Convictions Don’t Fit NPR’s Narrative — So They Left Them Out

Israeli police and rescue personnel at the scene of a bus bombing on a Tel Aviv passenger bus on Wednesday Nov 21 2012 leaving 21 people wounded, three of them seriously. Police commissioner Yohanan Danino said that all signs point to a terror attack. Photo by Tomer Neuberg/ Flash90

The Lie:
Israel imprisoned an ordinary “Palestinian man who became a novelist.”

The Truth:
Bassam Khandaqji was serving three life sentences for assisting the PFLP in a suicide bombing that killed three Israeli civilians.

Background

  • Major Western media have profiled Palestinians released from Israeli prisons by highlighting their achievements, while frequently failing to note that many were convicted for serious terror offenses, including lethal bombings.
  • On November 24, 2025, NPR published a feature about Bassam Khandaqji, focusing on his literary recognition and recent release, presenting his story primarily through the lens of his development as a novelist, omitting the fact that he was imprisoned for his involvement in a deadly suicide bombing in Israel in 2004. 


Truth: Explained

Quotes

  • “Bassam Khandaqji is not just a ‘Palestinian man who became a novelist.’ He is a convicted terrorist.” — HonestReporting
  • “Khandaqji allegedly used a journalist identification card… to help the suicide bomber enter Israel from the West Bank.” — Times of Israel (April 29, 2024)
  • “Three people were killed and over 30 wounded when Amar Al-Far, 16, from the Askar refugee camp in Nablus, detonated a bomb at the popular Carmel Market in Tel Aviv.” — Times of Israel (April 29, 2024)

Takeaway

  • Whitewashing terrorism turns a killer into a character. Change the headline, and you change how the public understands the crime.

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