Abu Akleh, a 51-year-old U.S. citizen, had been covering a military raid on the Jenin refugee camp "when she was shot in the face by a single bullet, ...
You may click on “Your Choices” below to learn about and use cookie management tools to limit use of cookies when you visit NPR’s sites. If you click “Agree and Continue” below, you acknowledge that your cookie choices in those tools will be respected and that you otherwise agree to the use of cookies on NPR’s sites. NPR’s sites use cookies, similar tracking and storage technologies, and information about the device you use to access our sites (together, “cookies”) to enhance your viewing, listening and user experience, personalize content, personalize messages from NPR’s sponsors, provide social media features, and analyze NPR’s traffic.
Palestinian-American Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was fatally shot while covering an Israeli military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin on ...
She was 51, according to the university. "Shireen fell while she was wearing press (gear) and even with that the people who tried to save her were shot at, the targeting was clear against Shireen and against us as journalistic teams." Al-Samudi said later Wednesday that there were no Palestinian gunmen in the area at the time. "The possibility that journalists were hit, possibly by Palestinian gunfire, is being investigated. The prime minister's office released a video showing people running in the Jenin refugee camp, shouting about a soldier being hit. Akleh's producer, Ali Al-Samudi, was also shot and is in a stable condition, the ministry said.
Israeli forces shot Abu Akleh in the head while she was on assignment in Jenin in the occupied West Bank.
“In disbelief,” wrote Salem Barahmeh, a Palestinian activist. Shireen was most prominent Palestinian journalist and a close friend. Shireen was a message throughout all her journalistic life, and even in her martyrdom, she is a message,” Rinawi told Al Jazeera. “Israeli occupation forces assassinated our beloved journalist Shireen Abu Akleh while covering their brutality in Jenin this morning. Israeli occupation forces assassinated our beloved journalist Shireen Abu Akleh while covering their brutality in Jenin this morning. The Israeli military said its soldiers had come under attack with heavy gunfire and explosives while operating in Jenin, and that they fired back. “The killing was deliberate… “What we know for now is that the Palestinian health ministry has announced her death. On the way there – I will bring you news as soon as the picture becomes clear.” It is a crime, it is all clear – intentional and direct targeting. He said that her body was transferred for an autopsy based on an order from the public prosecution. She said the group of journalists had been directly targeted.
Israeli and Palestinian officials gave disputing accounts of her death.
So let's peek at how that's playing in the deals universe, as investors try to determine the sharpness of those falling knives: - Bennett shared a video of Palestinian gunmen firing and shouting that an Israeli soldier was hit. - Israeli officials said Foreign Minister Yair Lapid spoke to al-Sheikh Wednesday morning and proposed holding a joint investigation. He said there was no evidence so far that could allow officials to determine who shot her. - But later Wednesday, the Israeli military backtracked from its initial claim that that Abu Akleh may have been killed by Palestinian gunmen. Kohavi said he regrets her death and announced he appointed a special team to hold an operational investigation into the incident.
The network and Palestinian officials said journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was killed by Israeli fire. Israel said Palestinian gunmen may have been ...
Abu Akleh was among the most high-profile Palestinian journalists and a veteran of covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In the over two decades since, her voice, face and reportage became a mainstay for Palestinian audiences. Ahmad Al Husari, a 47-year-old produce vendor, said Israeli soldiers broke through the door to his house about 5 a.m. His hallway was pocked with bullet holes and covered in glass. “A sniper from somewhere shot Shireen in the head. “The house was at the top of the camp; we were far below,” he said, referring to the Jenin refugee camp. By Wednesday afternoon, fresh flowers and olive branches already covered the drying pool of blood where she fell. “We don’t put ourselves in the line of fire. A Jenin field researcher from B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization, shared a map with reporters marking the location of Abu Akleh’s killing and the location of events depicted in the video distributed by Israeli officials. They were near Israeli military vehicles, he said, and they moved slowly to make sure the soldiers could identify them as reporters. During the operation, he said, “armed Palestinians shot in an inaccurate, indiscriminate and uncontrolled manner.” “To uncover the truth, there must be a real investigation, and the Palestinians are currently preventing that. He had been working with Abu Akleh on Wednesday as a producer, he said.
Her death was confirmed by the Palestine health ministry and later by Israeli sources. Al Jazeera reports that she was shot in the face by a single bullet fired ...
“Very sad to learn of the death of American and Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh,” U.S. Ambassador to Israel Tom Nides said in a tweet. The Israeli foreign minister Yair Lapid offered a joint investigation into her death. Very sad to learn of the death of American and Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh of @AJArabic @AJEnglish. I encourage a thorough investigation into the circumstances of her death and the injury of at least one other journalist today in Jenin. “We have offered the Palestinians a joint pathological investigation into the sad death of journalist Shireen Abu Aqla. Journalists must be protected in conflict zones and we all have a responsibility to get to the truth,” he said on Twitter. Hits were detected,” the IDF said. “The possibility that journalists were hit, possibly by Palestinian gunfire, is being investigated.”
Tributes paid to Al Jazeera journalist and authority on Israeli-Palestinian conflict who has been shot in West Bank.
The US ambassador to Israel, Tom Nides, said he was “very sad” to learn of Abu Akleh’s death. She is a reference in the Arab world. Everyone in the street would stop and salute her for her courage and determination and unique way of telling the stories of Palestinians. Arabs cannot go to Palestine. Shireen took them there.”
Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian reporter for the broadcaster's Arabic language channel who is also a U.S. citizen, was shot and died soon afterward.
In November of that year, AP cameraman Rashed Rashid was covering a protest near the Gaza frontier when he was shot in the left ankle, apparently by Israeli fire. He was wearing protective gear that clearly identified him as a journalist, and was standing with other journalists some 600 meters (660 yards) away from the Israeli border when he was hit. Israel said Hamas was using the building as a command center but has provided no evidence. Relations between Israeli forces and the media, especially Palestinian journalists, are strained. He said the military’s suggestion that they were shot by militants was a “complete lie.” Hundreds of Palestinians, including several masked gunmen, marched through Jenin in a funeral procession, carrying Abu Akleh's body draped with a Palestinian flag and a blue press vest. Shaza Hanaysheh, another Palestinian journalist among the reporters, also said there were no clashes or shooting in the immediate area. Nearly 3 million Palestinians live in the territory under Israeli military rule. The Israeli military said its forces came under attack with heavy gunfire and explosives while operating in Jenin, and that they fired back. Because no Israelis were hurt, he said that suggested the gunmen had shot a journalist instead. The Qatar-based network, which has long had strained relations with Israel, interrupted its broadcast to announce her death. Her death reverberated across the region and alighted social media.
We lost yet another revered Palestinian icon to the Israeli occupation.
All who knew her would speak fondly of her amazing spirit, her open heart, and her exemplary courage and professionalism in the line of duty. She was one of the first, who inspired a whole new generation of journalists to tell the story of Palestine, and over the years she always remained one of the most dedicated to the job. I was shy and felt embarrassed, but I still remember how she greeted me, speaking gently to a seven-year-old who wanted to grow up to be a brave journalist like her and my father. One day, I had insisted on joining my father, who was also a journalist, in visiting al-Muqata’a, the headquarters of the late Palestinian Authority leader Yasser Arafat. She had a grandstanding in the local journalistic community. I felt safe in her presence. She spoke from Palestine, and was heard by the entire world. She was a hero to me. For me, she was much, much more than a professional role model. It was a notification from a Telegram channel called “Martyrs of Palestine”. I wasn’t shocked. She was loved and respected by all. Shireen Abu Akleh was an icon in Palestine and the Arab world.
The veteran Palestinian-American journalist was a household name in the Arab world, chronicling the suffering of Palestinians for two-and-a-half decades for ...
How to get help: In the US, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255. The penalty is doubled in cases of attempted mass suicide. "In difficult times, I overcame fear," Abu Akleh said in the October video. Qatar's Emir Tamim bin Hamad will visit Iran this week in an attempt to revive the stalled talks. She is the voice of our aspiration for freedom." The country is also home to two cities with a large expat presence. At the time of her death, she was learning Hebrew to understand Israeli media narratives better, Al Jazeera said. - Background: Biden would possibly visit Al Makassed Hospital, although plans are yet to be finalized, the Israeli official added. Abu Akleh became the face of that coverage at home and around the region. - Background: Earlier this month, foreign workers forced another food delivery company to scrap plans to cut wages after walking off the job in protest. The Al Jazeera reporter was the only journalist to cover her own arrest by soldiers, Barghouti wrote. But Al Jazeera's biggest pull for audiences was arguably its coverage of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
"We pledge to prosecute the perpetrators legally, no matter how hard they try to cover up their crime, and bring them to justice," the media network said in ...
“He said they were all wearing protective gear that clearly marked them as reporters, and they passed by Israeli troops so the soldiers would know that they were there,” AP reported. “Everybody knew her name,” Hatuqa continued. Al Jazeera Media Network condemns this heinous crime, which intends to only prevent the media from conducting their duty.
Earlier today, Israeli forces killed Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in cold blood. Tragically, it's nothing new for Israel, which has made a ...
That the Nakba was not a single moment in history, but rather constitutes an ongoing process of violence and displacement, is the fact Israeli forces are trying — and failing — to hide. “I chose journalism to be close to the people,” Shireen Abu Akleh previously said. Last week, Israel’s high court green-lit the eviction of one thousand Palestinians from Masafer Yatta, a rural area of the South Hebron Hills home to several small Palestinian villages. Therein lies the goal: stifling the documentation of the ethnic cleansing and systematic oppression in which the Israeli forces are engaged, so that it can proceed with minimal awareness raised and zero accountability faced. In fact, one year ago this week, during Israel’s relentless pummelling of the Gaza Strip, Israeli jets flattened a building containing the offices of news organizations including Associated Press and Al Jazeera. Just last month, a formal complaint was lodged with the International Criminal Court by the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, and the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP) regarding Israel’s “systematic targeting” of Palestinian journalists.
Shireen Abu Akleh covered occupied Palestine for two decades. She was killed doing her job.
“This underlying daily reality of apartheid and the cold violence of structural repression leads to the hot violence of bloodshed and the killing of Palestinians.” Israel tends to stretch out the investigations as long as possible and in the end fails to hold military leaders to account, according to El-Ad. “Israel treats every incident as an extraordinarily exceptional occurrence, and the investigations always push the responsibility down to the lowest level of soldiers,” he told me. The Israeli foreign ministry shared a video of Palestinian gunmen active in the city Wednesday to back up these claims. Israel has even designated the premier Palestinian rights organization Al-Haq as a terrorist organization, in what experts called retribution for Al-Haq’s documentation of violations on the ground. “Without a serious investigation, we will not reach the truth.” That likely has something to do with the Israeli government not having a good track record of investigating its own crimes. Ali Samoudi, her producer, who was also shot and is currently in the hospital, said Israeli forces shot her. Israeli military spokesperson Ran Kochav said, “They’re armed with cameras, if you’ll permit me to say so,” and in so doing drew a not-subtle comparison between the work of journalism and that of violence. “It fits a pattern, a pattern of unlawful killing, and also a pattern of targeting journalists and human rights defenders.” Israel attributed Abu Akleh’s death to Palestinian gunmen, saying she was caught in the crossfire of clashes. According to the Associated Press, she was brought to the hospital, where she died. For over two decades, journalist Shireen Abu Akleh covered human rights abuses in the occupied Palestinian territory.
JERUSALEM (AP) — Veteran Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was shot and killed on Wednesday while covering an Israeli military raid in the occupied ...
In November of that year, AP cameraman Rashed Rashid was covering a protest near the Gaza frontier when he was shot in the left ankle, apparently by Israeli fire. It aired a video showing Abu Akleh lying motionless on the side of a road wall as another journalist crouches nearby and a man screams for an ambulance. The findings of its probe into Abu Akleh's death could draw new scrutiny. She was widely recognized in the West Bank and was also a U.S. citizen. One of its key arguments against the probe has been that its military justice system is capable of investigating itself. Israel said Hamas was using the building as a command center but has provided no evidence. The outcome of Israel’s military investigation will be closely watched. Israel has conducted near-daily raids in Jenin in recent weeks following a series of deadly attacks inside Israel carried out by militants from the area. He said any suggestion they were shot by militants was a “complete lie.” “Currently we do not know what was the direct cause of Shireen’s death. He said Israel asked the Palestinian medical team that performed a preliminary autopsy to hand over the fatal bullet for further examination. Palestinians gathered outside the family's house on Wednesday evening, some holding Palestinian flags and posters with the journalist's photo.
Senior officials from across the United Nations are calling for an investigation into the killing on Wednesday of well-known Al Jazeera correspondent ...
I call on the relevant authorities to investigate this crime and bring those responsible to justice.” Secretary-General António Guterres was appalled by the killing and echoed the call for the relevant authorities to conduct an independent and transparent investigation, according to a statement issued by his Spokesperson. Impunity must end.” Media workers should never be targeted,” said Mr. Wennesland. “We urge an independent, transparent investigation into her killing. Ms. Azouley recalled that UNESCO works to raise awareness about the need to protect journalists, notably through the UN Plan of Action on the Safety of journalists and the Issue of Impunity.
Advocates say US should not allow Israel to investigate itself for killing of second American citizen this year.
“He will work to ensure that Palestinians and Israelis enjoy equal measures of freedom, security, prosperity, and democracy.” However, Palestinian rights advocates say Biden has done little – other than resuming some humanitarian aid to Palestinians – to change the policies of his predecessor Donald Trump on Israel-Palestine. “Those responsible for Shireen’s killing should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” Price told reporters. But since then, next to nothing has been said by US officials about the killing of the elderly American citizen. What will they do next? On Wednesday, Price said repeatedly when pressed by reporters at a State Department briefing that Israel has the “wherewithal and the capabilities to conduct a thorough, comprehensive investigation” into the killing of Abu Akleh.
Abu Akleh, a Palestinian American, had been covering a military raid on the Jenin refugee camp "when she was shot in the face by a single bullet, ...
Against that backdrop, the Israeli government is trying to be sensitive to the anger of its citizens, even as the leadership struggles politically to survive. It acknowledges that its soldiers opened fire, but it said that only happened after "tens of Palestinian gunmen fired at and hurled explosive devices toward the soldiers." This past weekend, a Palestinian axe attack killed three Israelis. And on Wednesday, Palestinian officials said Israeli troops had killed another Palestinian. (Editor's note: NPR is a member of the organization.) It said the TV correspondent had been "assassinated in cold blood" after she was targeted by the Israeli forces. The posting seemed to imply the gunman's bullets might have struck the journalists. Hours after her death, mourners came to pay their respects as Abu Akleh's body was moved from a hospital to be prepared for burial. The video does not show whether the person firing hit anyone, or where the bullets may have landed. Al Jazeera producer Ali Samoudi was also shot while covering the raid. "We stood together in a collective way as journalists, then we started moving. The Foreign Press Association in Israel and the Palestinian territories says it is "appalled and deeply shocked" by the killing of Abu Akleh. It also said the investigation into her death should be immediate and transparent. Israel's military said it "is investigating the event and looking into the possibility that journalists were hit by the Palestinian gunmen."
A prominent Palestinian-American journalist was killed in the West Bank and her network blames Israeli forces. Israel says it's possible Palestinian gunmen ...
You may click on “Your Choices” below to learn about and use cookie management tools to limit use of cookies when you visit NPR’s sites. If you click “Agree and Continue” below, you acknowledge that your cookie choices in those tools will be respected and that you otherwise agree to the use of cookies on NPR’s sites. NPR’s sites use cookies, similar tracking and storage technologies, and information about the device you use to access our sites (together, “cookies”) to enhance your viewing, listening and user experience, personalize content, personalize messages from NPR’s sponsors, provide social media features, and analyze NPR’s traffic.
Abu Akleh was shot in the face, on purpose, while doing what she has been doing since 1997 for Al Jazeera: telling the truth. She was murdered for telling, yet ...
She got in the way. It goes like this: We will never know who shot Abu Akleh in the face. She knew the risks. She was shot in the face. Maybe an armed Israeli soldier, not an “armed” Palestinian – are there any other kind? Damn. That meant powerful people and institutions who normally do not give a damn when Palestinians are murdered had to say something since Abu Akleh was an American. She was admired and respected because she told the truth about the cruelty Palestinians suffer and endure every day. An Al Jazeera producer, who survived, was shot in the back. Late Wednesday, an Israeli general said, well, maybe Abu Akleh was not the victim of Palestinian on Palestinian violence. Abu Akleh’s body lay on the side of a road, next to a wall. In the face. She did it with grace, patience and resilience despite the indignities, horrors and dangers.
The Palestinian Authority said it would not give Israeli officials the bullet that killed Shireen Abu Akleh in the occupied West Bank during an Israeli raid ...
We go and we try to find where we can stand and how to protect the team with me before I think about how I am going to go up on the screen and what I am going to say.” She soon became a household name among Palestinians and Arabs across the Middle East, inspiring many to follow in her path. She spent time in the United States when she was younger and obtained U.S. citizenship through family on her mother’s side, who lived in New Jersey, friends and colleagues said. It was not the biggest or political stories that most interested Ms. Abu Akleh, but the smaller ones that showed how people lived, said Wessam Hammad, a news producer with Al Jazeera, who worked with her for 17 years. She always put herself in danger just to convey the stories of Palestinians.” Such a concern also kept Palestinians from across the occupied West Bank and inside Israel from attending the funeral, she said. She was a symbol, and she lived inside all of our homes.” The bullet that killed Ms. Abu Akleh has become the focus of two competing narratives about the circumstances of her death. “When we saw that Shireen had been assassinated, we all felt it, in every Palestinian home,” said Thuraya Elayan, a 66-year-old Ramallah resident. She and several other journalists at the scene were wearing blue flak jackets and helmets marked with the word “Press.” Mr. al-Sheikh also accused Israeli soldiers of killing Ms. Abu Akleh, dismissing Israeli claims that the journalist may have been hit by Palestinian fire. He also awarded her the Star of Jerusalem, or Al-Quds Star, an honor typically bestowed on ministers, ambassadors and members of Parliament.
Media outlets ignored Israel's role in Abu Akleh's death, according to social media users and commentators.
She “was [not] killed” by aliens, she was killed by Israeli forces. .@APreporting that the iconic Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Aqleh “was killed by gunfire” is unethical journalism. If a journalist was targeted and killed by Russian military forces in Ukraine, the US media would report it as an assassination and stir outrage. “If a journalist was targeted and killed by Russian military forces in Ukraine, the US media would report it as an assassination and stir outrage,” he tweeted. “Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was murdered by Israeli soldiers. Kevin Gosztola criticised Western media outlets for the difference in their approaches to the conflicts in Ukraine and Palestine, and said that Abu Akleh was “owed coverage that doesn’t whitewash her death”. “Shireen Abu Akleh was shot and killed by an Israeli sniper while reporting on an Israeli military raid of a refugee camp,” she tweeted. Shireen Abu Akleh was shot and killed by an Israeli sniper while reporting on an Israeli military raid of a refugee camp. Correction: An earlier tweet misstated Al Jazeera’s comments about the death of Shireen Abu Akleh. The network said she was killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank city of Jenin; it did not say she was killed during clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian gunmen. “She ‘was [not] killed’ by aliens, she was killed by Israeli forces. The New York Times also released a correction for “misstating” Al Jazeera’s statement on Abu Akleh’s killing, after initially reporting incorrectly that Al Jazeera had said Abu Akleh was killed in “clashes”. The killing of Al Jazeera’s Shireen Abu Akleh in the occupied West Bank has created an uproar as commentators and social media users criticise Western media outlets for “whitewashed” reporting that appeared to shy away from mentioning that Israeli forces had killed the seasoned reporter.
Thousands of mourners gathered in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Thursday to mourn slain Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, as the Palestinian ...
"We rejected, and continue to reject, the joint investigation with the Israeli occupation authorities because they committed the crime and we do not trust them," said Abbas, standing before Abu Akleh's coffin. Journalists, diplomats, religious leaders, and officials including Arab members of Israel's parliament, the Knesset, attended the memorial procession at the Palestinian Authority President's residence, which saw Abu Akleh's Palestinian-flag-draped coffin carried in as honor guards played musical instruments. Al Jazeera has accused Israeli security forces of deliberately targeting and killing Abu Akleh, 51 -- one of the Arab world's most prominent journalists.
After PM suggested Shireen Abu Akleh was "likely" killed by Palestinian gunmen, defense chief concedes the fatal shot could have come from "our side."
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories — Palestinians planned a memorial service Thursday for journalist Shireen Abu Akleh who was killed while covering an Israeli raid in the West Bank, but have rejected U.S.-led calls for a joint investigation into her death. U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price echoed the sentiments of American Ambassador to Israel Tom Nides on Wednesday, condemning Abu Akleh's killing and calling for an "immediate and thorough" investigation into the shooting. All of the indicators , the evidence and the witnesses confirm her assassination by #Israeli special units." She will not be forgotten." A total of 31 Palestinians and three Israeli Arabs have died during the same period, according to an AFP tally, among them perpetrators of attacks and those killed by Israeli security forces in West Bank operations. Israel has publicly called for a joint investigation into the killing and asked Palestinian authorities to hand over the bullet that struck Abu Akleh for forensic examination.
Shireen Abu Akleh, a 51-year-old Palestinian-American correspondent for Al Jazeera Arabic, was shot dead while covering a raid by Israeli military and security ...
Abu Akleh was killed on a reporting assignment during an Israeli raid which the military said was conducted to find Palestinian “terrorist suspects.” Israeli forces have stepped up the number of raids in the area in recent weeks, following a wave of attacks targeting Jewish Israelis that have left 19 people dead. Thousands of Palestinians attended a state service for Abu Akleh in the Palestinian city Ramallah held a day after her killing. It is reportedly exploring the possibility that its soldiers were, in fact, to blame for the fatal shot. Ongoing clashes at the Al Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem, which is considered holy by both Muslims and Jews, have left dozens of Palestinians injured. Palestinian officials have conducted a post-mortem but have not yet released the results. These included the second intifadeh—a five year Palestinian uprising against Israel which began in 2000—the battle of Jenin in 2002 and the death of Yasser Arafat, President of the Palestinian National Authority, in 2004. Tensions are particularly high right now in other areas of Israel and Palestinian territories. Having joined the network in 1997, only a year after its launch, she covered many of the region’s historic flashpoints. Israeli forces have been accused of harassing Palestinian journalists covering the conflict in the region. Abu Akleh’s death came just days after the publication of the 2022 World Press Freedoms Index which found that journalism is restricted and under threat in well over two thirds of the world. Her producer Ali al-Samoudi, who was shot in the back, is reportedly undergoing treatment. But other journalists at the scene disputed this version of events.
Many US lawmakers condemned the killing of Abu Akleh and called for an investigation, but few mentioned Israel by name.
The Israeli military killing of Shireen Abu Akleh is devastating and infuriating. “The Israeli military must conduct a thorough and objective investigation into Abu Akleh’s death, and be transparent about its findings,” Schiff said in a statement. I want to express my sincere condolences to the family of journalist, Shireen Abu Akleh. Some of them call New York's 9th District home. The House Foreign Affairs Committee shared Pelosi’s post on the killing via its Twitter account. I strongly condemn her death and call for an independent and thorough investigation into the incident.” “We need to investigate, ourselves, the killing of an American citizen. His office did not return Al Jazeera’s request for comment by time of publication. I join countless others in mourning the death of@AlJazeerajournalist, #ShireenAbuAkleh, who was killed by Israeli military while on assignment. Ro Khanna, a House progressive representing a district in California, wrote in a social media post, “The killing of American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh is devastating and a blatant assault on the freedom of the press.” “A thorough, objective investigation is needed now. Anyone who believes in press freedom and justice should call for a thorough and independent investigation into the killing of American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. https://t.co/eUqO133GwO The progressive lawmaker, who is of Palestinian descent, called for a moment of silence for the slain journalist on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday and condemned the killing in several statements and media appearances.
A veteran reporter was killed in the course of her work while clearly identified as 'Press,' How? Who by? Many of us think we can figure out the answers, ...
The only campaign I’m engaged in is to protect the state of Israel. In 99 percent of the operations against terror in urban areas, including in Jenin where we are fired on in all directions, we don’t hit innocents. “That’s our responsibility to the people of Israel,” he said. The general in charge of the Central Command area that includes Jenin, Yehuda Fuchs, told Channel 12 Wednesday night that “hundreds, even thousands of bullets” were fired by the sides in the gun battle, and “I don’t know which bullet” hit Abu Akleh. “I am sorry for every innocent person who is hurt in the course of IDF operations. He presented himself as the officer who was responsible for the operation — in that “I am the Central Command general. Who also, not incidentally, need to understand what’s being done in their name and for their defence. The journalist Shireen, who was really very close to the line where the forces were — ours and the Palestinian terrorists — was hurt there.” A point quite important to make, one would think, when trying to explain to a non-expert watching world the death of a journalist caught up in a gunfight. And I’m sorry about the death of Shireen Abu Akleh.” Very little was said by Israeli officials about the specific context for the army operation — the reason the IDF was there in the first place. Getting to the bottom of what happened — be it exculpatory or problematic — won’t alleviate Palestinian hostility, reverse closed-minded conclusions, or sweep aside mis- and disinformation. A Jerusalem-born Christian, she also held American citizenship, making the question of responsibility for her death a matter of direct significance for Israel’s most important ally. A veteran reporter was killed in the course of her work while clearly identified as ‘Press,’ How? Who by?
NPR's May Louise Kelly talks with journalist Dalia Hatuqa about her friend and colleague Shireen Abu Akleh, who was killed while reporting in occupied West ...
You may click on “Your Choices” below to learn about and use cookie management tools to limit use of cookies when you visit NPR’s sites. If you click “Agree and Continue” below, you acknowledge that your cookie choices in those tools will be respected and that you otherwise agree to the use of cookies on NPR’s sites. NPR’s sites use cookies, similar tracking and storage technologies, and information about the device you use to access our sites (together, “cookies”) to enhance your viewing, listening and user experience, personalize content, personalize messages from NPR’s sponsors, provide social media features, and analyze NPR’s traffic.
Beirut, May 12, 2022 – Israeli and Palestinian authorities should ensure that the investigation into the killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen ...
CPJ emailed the Palestinian Ministry of Information for comment, but did not receive any response. An initial autopsy conducted by the Institute of Pathology at Annajah University in the West Bank city of Nablus concluded that Abu Akleh was not killed at close range, but did not immediately determine who fired the shot that killed her, according to The Wall Street Journal. Forensic reports, findings, and evidence must be shared with international investigators and the public.”