With a journalist or media worker killed every day on average in the Israel-Hamas war, the head of the global organization representing the profession on Monday said that it has become a conflict beyond compare.
About 60 have been killed since the Oct. 7 start of the war, already close to the same number of journalists killed during the entire Vietnam War half a century ago. Other brutal wars in the Middle East have not come close to the intensity of the current one.
“In a war, you know, a classical war, I can say that in Syria, in Iraq, in ex-Yugoslavia, we didn’t see this kind of massacre,” said Anthony Bellanger, the general secretary of the International Federation of Journalists.
Photo: AFP
Since the end of the week-long ceasefire in Gaza on Friday, the misery has continued, he said.
“Unfortunately, we received the bad news this weekend — after the end of this ceasefire — and at least three or four were killed,” he said.
Bellanger said they are mourning about 60 journalists, including at least 51 Palestinian ones and also Israeli and Lebanese.
Most were killed during Israel’s bombardment in the Gaza Strip, he said, adding that Israeli journalists were also killed during Hamas’ attack in southern Israel that set off the war.
Those numbers are based on all available sources that the federation uses for its annual report, he said.
Along with the human toll, the premises of many media organizations in Gaza have been destroyed, he said.
About 1,000 journalists and media workers were working in Gaza before the conflict and now, no one can get out, he said.
Yet, amid the rubble, local journalists continue to do their job, Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate president Nasser Abu Baker said.
“They lost their families and they continue their work,” he said. “They are without houses and they continue their work. ... Without food, without the security for them, without their families. Also, if their families are still alive, they are not with their families because they are living or sleeping in the hospitals.”
Bellanger said Israeli authorities were not responsive.
“I called the Israeli government, but they didn’t reply, and when I went to Palestine a few days ago, I proposed to the government press office to have a meeting, just to have a follow-up about this call, but nobody replies,” he said.
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