These targeted assassinations are the tip of the iceberg. New reports are coming in out of Lebanon, with journalists being targeted by the IDF there. Lebanon Prime Minister Nawaf Salam is speaking out, condemning the cold blooded assassination of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon."Targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes," Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam wrote on X.Key points:Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

These targeted assassinations are the tip of the iceberg. New reports are coming in out of Lebanon, with journalists being targeted by the IDF there. Lebanon Prime Minister Nawaf Salam is speaking out, condemning the cold blooded assassination of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon."Targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes," Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam wrote on X.Key points:Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

"Targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes," Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam wrote on X.Key points:Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

"Targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes," Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam wrote on X.Key points:Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

Key points:Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

Key points:Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"The pattern of targeting is undeniableThe killing of journalists in conflict zones is not new, but the frequency and impunity with which they are targeted in Gaza have drawn international condemnation. Since the Israeli war on Hamas began in October 2023, at least 237 journalists have been killed according to the Government Media Office in Gaza. Al Jazeera alone has lost 11 staff members and eight freelancers. The Committee to Protect Journalists called the attack on al-Sharif and his colleagues part of a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists" and then smears them posthumously.The evidence of deliberate targeting is overwhelming. Al Jazeera's managing editor Mohamed Moawad told the press: "They were targeted in their tent, they weren't covering from the front line. The Israeli government is wanting to silence the coverage of any channel of reporting from inside Gaza." Just last month, Israeli military spokesperson Avichai Adraee posted a threatening video singling out al-Sharif, foreshadowing his assassination.This latest incident is part of a broader pattern of violence against media workers in the region. Human rights groups have accused Israel of systematically targeting journalists to suppress the truth about its military operations. The Israeli military later claimed, without providing a shred of proof, that al-Sharif was a "Hamas terrorist." This is the same regime that has killed over 186 journalists since October 2023, nearly all of them Palestinians.International condemnation meets institutional impunityLebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the killing of journalist Amal Khalil and the wounding of Zeinab Faraj in southern Lebanon, writing on X that "targeting journalists, obstructing access by relief teams to them, and even targeting their locations again after these teams have arrived, constitutes described war crimes." Salam vowed to pursue the case before international forums.The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that a vehicle and a building were struck in southern Lebanon, but denied reports that the injured journalists were blocked at the scene. On Wednesday, the Lebanese National News Agency reported that two Lebanese female journalists were injured in an airstrike on a house in the southern Lebanese city of Tyre. Rescuers were unable to reach the strike site for several hours due to the destruction of a road by another Israeli airstrike, as well as the blocking of the area by Israeli forces.The IDF said on Telegram: "Earlier today, IDF troops identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah. After identifying the individuals, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck. Reports were received that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes. The IDF is not preventing rescue teams from reaching the area. The details of the incident are under review."Lebanese media reported later that journalist Amal Khalil was killed in the Israeli airstrike in Tyre. Her body was reportedly discovered by rescuers after a several-hour search and rescue operation.Israel's censorship extends beyond assassinationsEven before the latest killings, Israel was actively suppressing journalism through legal means. U.K.-based writer Frank Wright expounded on this in a May 23 op-ed forLifeSiteNews, citing the ban on Qatari broadcasterAl Jazeeraand the confiscation of equipment owned by the Associated Press as examples of Tel Aviv's suppression.According to Wright, the Doha-funded Al Jazeera was officially banned from reporting in Israel on May 5. Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi had been seeking to shut it down since October, following Hamas' Oct. 7 attack. Karhi described the channel as a "propaganda mouthpiece" for Hamas. On April 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed Al Jazeera a "terror" channel. More than a month later, the Israeli government officially banned the channel. Under the ban, Al Jazeera's websites were blocked in Israel and its television broadcasts were prohibited.Police seized Al Jazeera's broadcasting equipment from its Jerusalem offices, and the Qatari news channel was taken off the air in Israel. The raid came immediately after the government approved a decision to temporarily shutter the outlet on the grounds that it had harmed national security.Even AP was not exempted from Karhi's censorship demands. At the communication minister's behest, the AP's equipment was seized on May 21. The news agency's live feeds from Gaza are widely used throughout world media. AP Vice President of Corporate Communications Lauren Easton denounced the move, calling it "an abusive use by the Israeli government of the country's new foreign broadcaster law." But following concern expressed by the White House, Karhi reversed the decision to shut down the agency's live news feed in Gaza.The final warning from a murdered journalistMoments before his murder, al-Sharif posted a video on social media capturing Israel's relentless bombardment of Gaza City. His final words were a haunting indictment: "If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased. History will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop."In a pre-written will shared posthumously, al-Sharif left a powerful testament to his mission: "I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification. Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing."The UN's special rapporteur on free expression, Irene Khan, condemned Israel's unsubstantiated claims against al-Sharif as a "blatant assault on journalists." But words alone will not stop the bloodshed. Israel's impunity is enabled by Western governments, particularly the United States, which continue to fund and arm this conflict while feigning concern for press freedom.The timing of this massacre is no coincidence. Just days earlier, Netanyahu's security cabinet approved plans to forcibly occupy Gaza City, displacing nearly a million Palestinians. Killing journalists ensures there will be no witnesses to the ethnic cleansing to come. The war on journalism is a war on truth itself. And if the international community continues to look away, Gaza's last remaining voices will be extinguished, and the bloodshed will continue into Lebanon and any other country that gets in the way of Greater Israel.Sources include:Sputnikglobe.comNaturalNews.comNaturalNews.com

Israeli forces killed five Al Jazeera journalists in a targeted strike on their clearly marked press tentIsrael accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"

Israel accused al-Sharif of being a Hamas operative without providing evidenceAt least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"

At least 237 journalists have been killed in Gaza since October 2023Lebanon's Prime Minister called similar targeting of journalists "war crimes"Israel banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Israel and seized Associated Press equipmentThe Committee to Protect Journalists documented a "decades-long practice in which Israel kills journalists"

Source: NaturalNews.com