
The Assassination of Journalists in Gaza Unmasks Israel's War on Truth
This is not new. Israel's war on the press is systematic, deliberate, and unrelenting. Journalists are hounded, threatened, and smeared. They are accused, without evidence, of being linked to armed groups. They are painted as enemies simply for reporting the reality on the ground. The aim is clear: to strip them of legitimacy in the eyes of the world and justify their killing.
Over the past 22 months alone, more than two hundred journalists have been killed in Gaza. Each death follows a familiar script.
Families are bombed, press vests offer no protection, and official statements claim 'links to terrorism' without a shred of proof. The truth they carried dies with them, and that is the point.
This week, Israeli drone missiles struck the journalists' tent outside the gates of Al-Shifa Medical Complex in Gaza City. Among the dead were Anas al-Sharif, a towering figure in Palestinian journalism; fellow Al Jazeera correspondent Mohammed Qreiqea; and three members of their camera crew.
Their tent was not a military target; it was a space where they gathered to report to the world. For months, Al-Sharif had been singled out in incitement campaigns, including direct threats from Israeli army spokesperson Avichay Adraee. On Sunday night, those threats became reality.
The killing of Al-Sharif and Qreiqea is not an isolated act. It joins a long chain of Israeli crimes against the press, from the assassination of Shireen Abu Akleh in Jenin while wearing a clearly marked press vest to the destruction of the Al-Jalaa Tower in Gaza, which housed the Associated Press, Al Jazeera, and other media outlets. Homes of journalists have been bombed, killing their families, and media offices have been flattened into dust.
These are not battlefield mistakes. They are part of a policy. Israel understands that an image pulled from the rubble or a live report from under bombardment can shatter decades of propaganda.
That is why it kills the eye that sees, the ear that hears, and the pen that writes. What happened outside Al-Shifa is one of the most brutal war crimes in this war's bloody record, a calculated strike to erase witnesses.
Al-Sharif and Qreiqea were not only reporters; they were voices of Gaza's suffering, trusted by millions, and feared by an occupation that survives on controlling the narrative. The Israeli military's political leadership knows that every truthful report, every unfiltered image, chips away at its carefully crafted version of events. It is not just waging a war on Gaza's people; it is waging a war on the very possibility of the truth being told.
And yet, for every journalist silenced, others step forward with cameras still rolling, knowing they could be next. In Gaza, telling the truth is not just a profession; it is an act of resistance.
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The Assassination of Journalists in Gaza Unmasks Israel's War on Truth
DaysofPal – In Gaza, telling the truth has become a death sentence. The Israeli military's bullets, bombs, and drones are not only aimed at fighters or buildings; they are aimed at the people who carry cameras, microphones, and notebooks. Journalists have become prime targets, punished simply for doing their job: showing the world what is happening. This is not new. Israel's war on the press is systematic, deliberate, and unrelenting. Journalists are hounded, threatened, and smeared. They are accused, without evidence, of being linked to armed groups. They are painted as enemies simply for reporting the reality on the ground. The aim is clear: to strip them of legitimacy in the eyes of the world and justify their killing. Over the past 22 months alone, more than two hundred journalists have been killed in Gaza. Each death follows a familiar script. Families are bombed, press vests offer no protection, and official statements claim 'links to terrorism' without a shred of proof. The truth they carried dies with them, and that is the point. This week, Israeli drone missiles struck the journalists' tent outside the gates of Al-Shifa Medical Complex in Gaza City. Among the dead were Anas al-Sharif, a towering figure in Palestinian journalism; fellow Al Jazeera correspondent Mohammed Qreiqea; and three members of their camera crew. Their tent was not a military target; it was a space where they gathered to report to the world. For months, Al-Sharif had been singled out in incitement campaigns, including direct threats from Israeli army spokesperson Avichay Adraee. On Sunday night, those threats became reality. The killing of Al-Sharif and Qreiqea is not an isolated act. It joins a long chain of Israeli crimes against the press, from the assassination of Shireen Abu Akleh in Jenin while wearing a clearly marked press vest to the destruction of the Al-Jalaa Tower in Gaza, which housed the Associated Press, Al Jazeera, and other media outlets. Homes of journalists have been bombed, killing their families, and media offices have been flattened into dust. These are not battlefield mistakes. They are part of a policy. Israel understands that an image pulled from the rubble or a live report from under bombardment can shatter decades of propaganda. That is why it kills the eye that sees, the ear that hears, and the pen that writes. What happened outside Al-Shifa is one of the most brutal war crimes in this war's bloody record, a calculated strike to erase witnesses. Al-Sharif and Qreiqea were not only reporters; they were voices of Gaza's suffering, trusted by millions, and feared by an occupation that survives on controlling the narrative. The Israeli military's political leadership knows that every truthful report, every unfiltered image, chips away at its carefully crafted version of events. It is not just waging a war on Gaza's people; it is waging a war on the very possibility of the truth being told. And yet, for every journalist silenced, others step forward with cameras still rolling, knowing they could be next. In Gaza, telling the truth is not just a profession; it is an act of resistance. Shortlink for this post:


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