logo
Well-known Palestinian journalist detained by Israeli police over alleged ‘incitement'

Well-known Palestinian journalist detained by Israeli police over alleged ‘incitement'

CNN —
Israeli police are seeking to keep a well-known Palestinian journalist in detention in Jerusalem on charges related to 'incitement' and 'support of terrorism,' despite an Israeli judge ordering her release on Monday.
Latifeh Abdellatif is a freelance photojournalist whose work has appeared in Reuters, ABC News, BBC, Al Jazeera and TRT, according to her Instagram account biography.
Israeli police said that she was apprehended at her home in the Old City on Sunday by Jerusalem District Police officers 'on suspicion of incitement and support for terrorism.'
Abdellatif's lawyer and her mother said she was arrested in the street on her way home, by officers arriving in unmarked vehicles.
Abdellatif denies the charges.
In a statement, police pointed to Abdellatif's posting of a video of late Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in which he says he wants to die as a 'martyr.'
'In these and other posts, it is evident that the suspect praises and glorifies the actions of terrorist organizations,' the statement said.
Abdellatif appeared via video link at a magistrates' court in Jerusalem on Monday, where a judge denied a police request to detain her for an additional five days in order to continue interrogations and investigation. At one point during the hearing, Abdellatif smiled and made a heart-shaped gesture with her hands.
'The court found that based on her work as a journalist and based on the defense that these posts are part of her professional work, and that the posts are more than six months old, there is no need for keeping her in detention and she doesn't create a danger to the public,' Abdellatif's lawyer Nasser Odeh told CNN after the hearing.
Odeh said the judge ordered Abdellatif's release 'under restrictive conditions.'
He said this included 2,000 Israeli shekels ($550) to be paid for bail and another 10,000 shekels as a guarantee that she would show up once called in for investigation.
However, Israeli police immediately appealed the decision, seeking to stop her release.
'The police have requested to freeze the decision of the release until they submit an appeal with the central court. Right now, the release decision has been frozen until the appeal process goes into effect,' the lawyer said.
Odeh told CNN that Abdellatif had been interrogated for three hours on Sunday 'about social media posts that are part of her professional work as a journalist.'
Abdellatif pictured with her son in Jerusalem.
Family photo
Targeted 'for the smallest things'
Abdellatif lives and works in Jerusalem. She has in the past reported on the tensions around access to the al-Aqsa mosque compound, monitoring clashes between Israeli police and Palestinian worshippers in the Old City.
CNN has witnessed her being harassed by Israeli security forces in the Old City on several occasions in the past, including being physically pushed aside and verbally abused. None of the occasions witnessed by CNN involved Abdellatif doing anything other than quietly standing on the side and using her camera to capture the events.
Abdellatif's mother told CNN on Monday her daughter is a working single mother to a 7-year-old son and that she 'has all the beautiful things in her character.'
Several of Abdellatif's colleagues described her as 'professional' and 'dedicated.' One said she was 'very kind and goes out of her way to help everyone, is respectable, and has good manners.'
One journalist told CNN that reporters in Jerusalem 'are more concerned and afraid to cover the news that deals with Palestinian matters because it can easily be brought upon us as an incitement charge.'
Another journalist said that Jerusalem-based reporters feel 'targeted by Israel security after the (October 7 Hamas attacks) for the smallest things.'
None of the journalists wanted to be named for fear of repercussions.
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said that since the start of the war in Gaza, an 'unprecedented' number of journalists and media workers have been arrested in what they and their attorneys say is retaliation for their journalism and commentary.
As of March 13, 2025, CPJ had documented a total of 75 arrests of journalists in the occupied West Bank, Gaza and Jerusalem. Israel arrested 70; Palestinian authorities arrested five, it said.
The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate condemned Abdellatif's arrest on Monday. In a statement, the syndicate said Israeli security authorities 'have arrested and expelled eight journalists from the Old City and al-Aqsa Mosque since the beginning of this month.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WATCH: Amani Al-Khatahtbeh on ‘The Muslim Girl' Reckoning
WATCH: Amani Al-Khatahtbeh on ‘The Muslim Girl' Reckoning

CairoScene

time2 hours ago

  • CairoScene

WATCH: Amani Al-Khatahtbeh on ‘The Muslim Girl' Reckoning

'We lost a lot of sponsorships and partners that claimed to be allies after October 7th,' the Muslim Girl's founder shares. For over a decade, Muslim Girl has been the internet's loudest answer to a simple, loaded question: What does it mean to be a Muslim woman online? Founded by Palestinian-American Amani Al-Khatahtbeh at just 17, the platform has grown into a living archive of Muslim identity in the digital age. 'The most powerful thing about social media and being online is that it completely removes the borders between us,' author, activist, and Muslim Girl founder Amani Al-Khatahtbeh tells CairoScene. She knows those borders well. Raised in New Jersey with Palestinian roots, Amani experienced firsthand how Western media distorted her sense of self. 'I grew up through a lot of media propaganda trying to shove down my throat who I was, where I came from.' Being a visibly Muslim girl in the West, the platform was born from a deep need to see herself reflected in media, to find other girls like her. Muslim Girl became more than a blog; it became a communal space and a cultural record. 'We created a real-time chronicle of the evolution of our identities from the past decade,' she reflects. Today, Amani is not just a founder; she's a media force. Named a media titan by The New York Times, she leads what is now the largest platform for Muslim women in the U.S. But everything changed after October 7th. In the wake of Israel's ongoing genocide in Gaza, Muslim Girl took a firm stand, centring Palestinian human rights. That choice came at a cost. 'We lost a lot of sponsorships… partners that claimed to be allies suddenly took a step back,' Amani says. 'It created a very big reckoning for us, about what our values and priorities as a company really are.' The censorship, defunding, and corporate silence didn't quiet her; they sharpened her. Amani is now leading Muslim Girl into a new era, one rooted in justice, international law, and lasting advocacy. 'We live in a world where we have international court cases using social media and blogs as actual evidence for the first time… We are setting new precedents.' What started as a personal blog is now a legal tool. Once laughed at for referencing it in job applications, Amani is now using that same blog as the foundation for her academic work, currently earning a degree in international human rights law at Oxford University. She's interrogating policy, one post at a time. 'I'm excited about entering into this new era,' she says, 'where we can really strengthen the advocacy work… and push for the sanctity of our communities moving forward.' With over 1.5 million followers across platforms, Muslim Girl has become a global voice for Muslim women. And as narratives shift and institutions are challenged, it stands firm in its day-one ethos: to represent—and become—that Muslim girl, both online and on the ground.

Iran Strikes Israeli Oil Infrastructure in Haifa, Escalating Energy Conflict
Iran Strikes Israeli Oil Infrastructure in Haifa, Escalating Energy Conflict

See - Sada Elbalad

time3 hours ago

  • See - Sada Elbalad

Iran Strikes Israeli Oil Infrastructure in Haifa, Escalating Energy Conflict

Taarek Refaat Israeli energy firm Oil Refineries Ltd. (ORL) reported that its oil pipelines and transport infrastructure in Haifa sustained damage from Iranian missile strikes, marking a direct escalation targeting the country's critical energy assets. In a formal disclosure to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, the company stated that no casualties were reported, and that core refining operations remain active, despite the temporary shutdown of several processing units. "We have initiated a comprehensive technical damage assessment to evaluate the impact on operations and analyze the potential financial implications for our upcoming quarterly results," ORL said in its statement. Strategic Energy Targets in Crosshairs The incident follows an aggressive response by Israel, which reportedly struck a major gas facility in the Persian Gulf, deepening the direct confrontation between the two regional powers. Analysts note that this shift toward energy infrastructure reflects a deliberate strategy to cripple domestic supply chains, rather than directly targeting oil or gas exports. This move, experts warn, could destabilize global energy markets if similar strikes continue or expand into export terminals and international shipping routes. Broader Economic Fallout The military escalation is already producing ripple effects: Global energy prices have begun climbing amid fears of further supply disruption. In Iran, the national currency continues to plunge, exacerbating the country's ongoing economic woes. The Israeli energy sector faces rising operational risks and potential production bottlenecks. This latest round of hostilities may mark a new phase in the conflict — one that not only reshapes the regional security map, but also tests the resilience of global energy supply networks and financial markets. read more Gold prices rise, 21 Karat at EGP 3685 NATO's Role in Israeli-Palestinian Conflict US Expresses 'Strong Opposition' to New Turkish Military Operation in Syria Shoukry Meets Director-General of FAO Lavrov: confrontation bet. nuclear powers must be avoided News Iran Summons French Ambassador over Foreign Minister Remarks News Aboul Gheit Condemns Israeli Escalation in West Bank News Greek PM: Athens Plays Key Role in Improving Energy Security in Region News One Person Injured in Explosion at Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier Sports Former Al Zamalek Player Ibrahim Shika Passes away after Long Battle with Cancer Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Business Fear & Greed Index Plummets to Lowest Level Ever Recorded amid Global Trade War Arts & Culture Zahi Hawass: Claims of Columns Beneath the Pyramid of Khafre Are Lies News Flights suspended at Port Sudan Airport after Drone Attacks News Shell Unveils Cost-Cutting, LNG Growth Plan Videos & Features Video: Trending Lifestyle TikToker Valeria Márquez Shot Dead during Live Stream Technology 50-Year Soviet Spacecraft 'Kosmos 482' Crashes into Indian Ocean News 3 Killed in Shooting Attack in Thailand

Israel, Iran exchange airstrikes in unprecedented escalation, sparking fears of regional war
Israel, Iran exchange airstrikes in unprecedented escalation, sparking fears of regional war

Daily News Egypt

time4 hours ago

  • Daily News Egypt

Israel, Iran exchange airstrikes in unprecedented escalation, sparking fears of regional war

Tensions between Israel and Iran reached a dangerous new level on Sunday, as both countries launched direct missile and airstrikes on each other's territory—an unprecedented escalation that left scores dead and heightened fears of a wider regional conflict. Iranian missile attacks on the Israeli cities of Bat Yam and Tel Aviv reportedly killed seven people and injured nearly 240 others, according to Israeli media. Sixty-one buildings were damaged, and approximately 20 people remain unaccounted for under the rubble. In a swift and far-reaching response, the Israeli military carried out airstrikes on several Iranian military and nuclear-related sites, including a nuclear facility in Isfahan and the airport in Mashhad. Israel's military described the Mashhad strike—some 2,300 kilometers from Israeli territory—as its 'farthest operation to date' in the conflict. A military spokesperson said Israel had targeted two dual-use fuel facilities believed to support Iran's nuclear and military activities. The spokesperson added that Israel has a 'long list of undisclosed targets' and is working to establish aerial dominance over Iran using drones and precision-guided weapons. Citing unnamed intelligence sources, Reuters reported that at least 14 Iranian nuclear scientists have been killed since Friday, some in targeted car bombings—signaling a significant escalation in Israel's campaign against Iran's scientific infrastructure. In retaliation, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched a multi-phase counterattack dubbed 'True Promise 3', involving a record number of ballistic missiles and drones. A military official quoted by Fars News Agency claimed the assault penetrated seven layers of Israel's air defense systems, and that Israel had begun redeploying advanced systems like the SAMP/T from Ukraine to reinforce its air shield. Iranian state media reported that Israeli strikes on cities including Shiraz and Isfahan killed at least 128 people—among them 40 women and numerous children—and injured nearly 900. Despite the attacks, Iran's Atomic Energy Organization vowed to continue its peaceful nuclear program. 'The enemies' desperate attacks will not stop the will of the nation,' it said in a statement. In Tehran, a drone strike lightly damaged the city's police headquarters and injured several people. Separately, Iranian intelligence forces announced the arrest of two alleged members of a 'Mossad-linked terrorist cell' in Alborz Province, reportedly involved in manufacturing explosives. The Israeli army issued evacuation warnings to civilians near Iranian military and nuclear facilities, advising them to leave immediately and not return 'until further notice.' Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi emphasized that Iran's retaliation targeted Israeli military sites and reiterated that Tehran does not seek a wider war. However, he warned that Iran would continue to respond to aggression and accused Israel of violating international norms by targeting nuclear infrastructure. In a briefing to foreign ambassadors, he criticized the UN Security Council for what he called 'dangerous silence' on Israel's actions. In Washington, former President Donald Trump told ABC News that the US may consider intervening militarily to 'help Israel eliminate Iran's nuclear program.' CNN reported that US and Israeli officials anticipate the conflict may extend for 'weeks rather than days,' and that the White House has privately signaled its approval of Israel's operations. A senior US official said diplomacy remains an option, depending on Iran's next moves. Back in Iran, authorities urged citizens to take shelter in mosques, schools, and metro stations, while also attempting to reassure the public that supplies of food, fuel, and medicine remain stable.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store