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Israel Has Been Silencing and Assassinating Palestinians Journalists Since 1967

August 26, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

A funeral ceremony takes place in the courtyard of Nasser Hospital in Gaza following the deaths of five journalists on Aug. 25, 2025.
A funeral ceremony takes place in the courtyard of Nasser Hospital in Gaza following the deaths of five journalists on Aug. 25, 2025. Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu via Getty Images

By Maha Nassar

Five journalists were among the 22 people killed on Aug. 25, 2025, in Israeli strikes on the Nasser Hospital in the Gaza Strip. Following global condemnation, the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement saying Israel “values the work of journalists.” But the numbers tell a different story.

Those deaths bring the total number of journalists killed in Gaza in almost two years of war to 192. The Committee to Protect Journalists, which collates that data, accuses Israel of “engaging in the deadliest and most deliberate effort to kill and silence journalists” that the U.S.-based nonprofit has ever seen. “Palestinian journalists are being threatened, directly targeted and murdered by Israeli forces, and are arbitrarily detained and tortured in retaliation for their work,” the committee added.

As a scholar of modern Palestinian history, I see the current killing of reporters, photographers and other media professionals in Gaza as part of a longer history of Israeli attempts to silence Palestinian journalists. This history stretches back to at least 1967, when Israel militarily occupied the Palestinian territories of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip following the Six-Day War.

Beyond the humanitarian toll, what makes matters even more drastic now is that, with Israeli restrictions on foreign media entering Gaza, local Palestinian journalists are the only people who can bear witness to the death and destruction taking place – and report it to a wider world. Indeed, nearly all of the nearly 200 journalists killed since Oct. 7, 2023, have been Palestinian.

A decades-long process in the making

From the first days of the occupation in 1967, Israel has tried to keep a tight grip on media reporting, building a legal and military architecture that aimed to control and censor Palestinian journalism.

In August 1967, the army issued Military Order 101, effectively criminalizing “political” assembly and “propagandistic” publications in the occupied territories.

Yet despite such restrictions, local journalism persisted and grew. By the early 1980s, Palestinians in the occupied territories were publishing three dailies, five weeklies and four magazines. The most popular publications circulated up to 15,000 copies.

But all Palestinian publications were subject to Israeli military censorship. Every night, editors were forced to submit two copies of everything they planned to print to Israeli censors. That included articles, photos, ads, weather reports and even crossword puzzles.

Anything the Israeli censor deemed to be “of political significance” had to be removed prior to publication. Editors who violated these terms, or who were accused of belonging to Palestinian political groups, could be detained or deported. These practices have echoes today with Israel often accusing the journalists it kills of being Hamas operatives.

Censorship regimes

Objecting to these and many other restrictions, Palestinians launched the first intifada, or uprising, against the Israeli occupation in December 1987. During the uprising’s first year, Israeli forces reportedly jailed 47 Palestinian reporters, temporarily banned eight local and regional newspapers, permanently revoked the licenses of two magazines and closed four press service offices.

A man is seen in a street holding a video camera.
Reuters TV journalist Mazen Dana runs as he is hit by rubber-jacketed metal bullets fired by Israeli soldiers as he films a youth burning an Israeli flag in 1997.
Hossam Abu Alan/AFP via Getty Images

While intended to be a show of force, most Palestinians saw the restrictions as evidence that Israel was afraid of Palestinians reporting on their own conditions.

Many people hoped that the Oslo Accords – a series of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization that formally launched in 1993 – would lead to greater press freedoms. But it was not to be the case.

Israeli authorities continued to enforce military censorship on what they deemed to be “security topics.” They also revoked the press cards of reporters who did not stay in line and assaulted and harassed journalists reporting from the ground.

Meanwhile, the newly established Palestinian Authority, set up as part of the Oslo process to partially govern Palestinian territories on what was meant to be a temporary basis, built a censorship regime of its own. It, too, arrested, suspended and closed news outlets it deemed too critical of its actions.

Shootings and impunity

By the 2000s, Israel’s attacks on journalists in the West Bank and Gaza Strip grew deadlier. Israeli forces fatally shot Palestinian photographer Imad Abu Zahra in Jenin in the West Bank in 2002, British filmmaker James Miller in Rafah in 2003 and Reuters cameraman Fadel Shana in Gaza in 2008.

Since 2008, as battles between Israeli forces and Palestinian militant groups have grown fiercer, journalists have worked under even deadlier conditions. Yet even during unarmed demonstrations, journalists have faced deadly Israeli force. In 2018, during the mass unarmed protests in Gaza known as the Great March of Return, Israeli forces shot and killed Palestinian journalists Yaser Murtaja and Ahmed Abu Hussein. Both were wearing “PRESS” vests when they were shot. In addition, at least 115 journalists were wounded while covering the protests, which lasted six months.

The deadly force has not been limited to Palestinians in Gaza. In May 2022, Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was killed in the Jenin refugee camp. One of the most famous Palestinian reporters at the time, Abu Akleh’s death drew hundreds of thousands of mourners, while Israeli police beat pallbearers at her funeral service.

Legitimate military targets?

International humanitarian law makes clear that journalists are civilians and therefore cannot be targeted during combat. That includes war correspondents who are covering war while under the protection of an armed group.

For their part, Israeli officials argue that they do not target journalists. They say that their strikes are aimed at legitimate military objectives, often asserting that Hamas embeds itself in civilian buildings or that some of the journalists killed were militants.

But such allegations are often made without independently verifiable evidence. Israel alleged that Murtaja, the journalist killed in Gaza in 2018, was a militant, but provided no proof.

The image of a woman with a flak jacket with 'justice' written on it is seen on a wall
A mural of slain U.S.-Palestinian correspondent Shireen Abu Akleh on a section of Israel’s separation fence between Jerusalem and the city of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank.
Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images

In the case of Abu Akleh, Israeli officials initially claimed that she may have been killed by Palestinian militants. They eventually admitted there was a “high possibility” that Israeli forces killed Abu Akleh, but claimed that the killing was accidental and therefore the government would not press charges. A recent documentary refutes that claim and identifies the Israeli soldier alleged to have killed Abu Akleh intentionally.

Culture of impunity

Even prior to the deadly Hamas-led attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, the picture emerging was that of impunity for Israeli forces who killed journalists – by accident or by design. A May 2023 report from the Committee to Protect Journalists concluded that Israel engaged in a “deadly pattern” of lethal force against journalists and failed to hold perpetrators accountable.

Since October 2023, journalists in Gaza have faced even deadlier conditions. Israel continues to ban international news agencies from reporting inside the Gaza Strip. As a result, local Palestinian journalists are often the only ones on the ground.

Aside from the deadly conditions, they contend with Israeli smears against their work and threats against their families.

Palestinian journalists there often run toward bombardments when others run away. As a result, they are sometimes killed in “double-tap” strikes, where Israeli air and drone strikes return to an area that has just been struck, killing rescue workers and the journalists covering them.

All this has led to an unbearable personal toll for those continuing to report from within Gaza. On Oct. 25, 2023, Al Jazeera’s Gaza bureau chief, Wael al-Dahdouh, was reporting live on air when he learned that an Israeli airstrike had killed his wife, two children and grandson. He returned on air the next day.

And the killing has not eased up. On Aug. 10, 2025, Israeli forces killed Anas al-Sharif in Gaza City, another prominent Al Jazeera correspondent who had stayed on the streets through months of bombardment. Five of his fellow journalists were also killed in the same airstrike.

The Aug. 25 strike on Nasser Hospital is just the latest in this deadly pattern.

A building is seen toppling to the ground with thick black smoke around it.
The Jala Tower, home to media outlets, collapses after an Israeli airstrike in Gaza on May 15, 2021.
Momen Faiz/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Among the five journalists killed in that attack were freelancers working for Reuters and The Associated Press – two international media outlets frustrated by Israel’s refusal to allow its journalists into Gaza to document the war.

Despite the danger, global newsrooms have repeatedly urged Israel to open Gaza to independent media, and a coalition of 27 countries recently pressed for access in Gaza.

Israel continues to refuse these requests. As such, Palestinian journalists remain the primary witnesses of Israel’s relentless assault on Gaza. And they are increasingly killed as they do so. The question remains whether the international community will hold Israel to account.

Maha Nassar is Associate Professor in the School of Middle Eastern and North African Studies at the University of Arizona.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. HayRide says

    August 26, 2025 at 9:35 pm

    So is Netanyahu to be trusted or not, I know Putin is not to be trusted

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  2. Sherry says

    August 27, 2025 at 10:35 am

    So glad this horrific story has finally come to light! Why am I not now surprised! Netanyahu is a despicable racist criminal who should be in jail for the rest of his life!

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  3. Jake from state farm says

    August 27, 2025 at 12:47 pm

    If only once FL could post something showing some support to what the Israelis are going through. Funny how the media acts like terror against Israelis started in October 2023. Hamas has been killing and kidnapping since the late 80s. Hezbollah’s hands are drenched in blood too—suicide bombings, rocket attacks, kidnappings. Palestinian Islamic Jihad? Same story—decades of shootings, stabbings, and bus bombings targeting civilians. Even the PLO carried out hijackings and massacres long before Hamas even existed.

    This isn’t new. Israelis have been burying their dead for decades while the world looks the other way. And now—months after October 7—hostages are STILL being held in Gaza. Innocent men, women, and children. Where’s the wall-to-wall coverage? Where are the “countdown clocks” the media loves to use for every other tragedy? Silence.

    The double standard is deafening. Terrorists kill Jews—it’s a footnote. Israel fights back—it’s breaking news.

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  4. M.T. Pockets says

    August 27, 2025 at 7:07 pm

    Jake:

    Stop your baloney. The nation of Israel sits on stolen Palestinian land.
    Of all the nations in the world, Israel should know a thing or two about concentration camps and starving people whose religion they despise. You’d think…
    The US propping up of Israel is exactly why 9/11 occurred.
    So munch on your Freedom Fries while you ponder my comment.

    You have a right to your own opinion, but not your own facts.

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  5. Kennan says

    August 27, 2025 at 9:54 pm

    As we sit back and see what we see with our eyes, not believing the carnage, in humanity, and blatant politicized murder. We as individuals cry out in vain….. Almost no tears left, while leaders condemn and debate how depraved people can be. Still…. Nothing. Nothing is done.
    There have been more journalist killed in Gaza than World War I, World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Yugoslavia, and Ukraine combined.
    Let that sink in. No news is good news if you are Israel. The bloodstained dam, they have tried to build to suppress the truth as far too many holes in it.
    Jake, you call October 7 a footnote, and what Israel’s doing breaking news. You flipped that on purpose. The world knows what Israel is doing and what they have done since October 7. If anybody has made October 7 a footnote, it is Israel and Netanyahu himself. The world sees what Israel is doing, yet corporate media as well as Israel, lobbies and apologists talk as if nothing happened after October 7, 2023. i’ve gone down this lane before with folks like you that refuse to see this modern day Holocaust for what it is. I have with pleasure dog walked plenty in the history lesson I gladly present to folks that have such a vile take on what’s really happening, and pretending one group of people is so much better than another. The conflation of Hamas and Palestinians is also both ignorant and racist. The exchange rate for human life if you are an Arab is low low low. That’s right Jake. After all, they’re only Arabs. You’re not racist right Jake? Right Jake?

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  6. nowallkissers says

    August 27, 2025 at 11:10 pm

    Randy needs to go and y’all have to stop voting for anyone who kisses walls

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  7. Pierre Tristam says

    August 28, 2025 at 1:22 pm

    Thank you M.T. Replying to Jake’s smokey mirrors gets tiresome.

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    1

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