âBBC cameraman Ron Skeans was violently pushed and shoved by a member of the crowd while covering a President Trump rally in Texas last night,â a BBC spokesman said in an email Tuesday.
Trump was in El Paso to increase support for his proposed wall on the U.S. border with Mexico, in his most significant rally since his funding demands for the project temporarily shut down the government. The president was talking about a decline in attacks on African, Hispanic and Asian-Americans when the cameraman was pushed.
A 36-second clip from Skeansâs camera before, during and after the shove was widely circulated on social media Tuesday. It shows a protester in a red Make America Great Again cap, who has not been publicly identified, shouting at members of the media as he is restrained by someone who appears to be part of the eventâs security team.
As the man struggles, the crowdâs chant shifts from âU.S.A.â to âLet him go.â
Gary OâDonoghue, the BBC Washington correspondent who covered the El Paso rally Monday, said the supporter had âtried to smashâ the camera before security escorted him out of the venue.
The BBC condemned the attack. âIt is clearly unacceptable for any of our staff to be attacked for doing their job,â the statement Tuesday said. The president could see what was happening and checked âthat all was OK,â the statement added.
Since the beginning of his presidency, Trump has had a strained relationship with the news media. He has repeatedly called journalists âthe enemy of the people,â and he used the term âFake Newsâ on Twitter at least 174 times last year alone.
In August, experts from the United Nations and a human rights body condemned the presidentâs attacks on the news media and warned that they could incite violence against journalists.
âHis attacks are strategic, designed to undermine confidence in reporting and raise doubts about verifiable facts,â David Kaye, the U.N. special rapporteur on freedom of expression, and Edison Lanza, who holds the same position at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, said in a statement.
âWe are especially concerned that these attacks increase the risk of journalists being targeted with violence,â they said.
During an interview last month, the publisher of The New York Times, A.G. Sulzberger, asked Trump about âpotentially dangerousâ rhetoric against journalists. In his response, Trump took credit for popularizing the term âfake newsâ but said he was not responsible for how it was used by other governments.
Skeans told the BBC that he âdidnât know what was going onâ when he was violently shoved Monday, but that he was now fine.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.