logo
ABC sounds alarm over Gaza famine, saying its Palestinian freelancers now too weak to work

ABC sounds alarm over Gaza famine, saying its Palestinian freelancers now too weak to work

The Guardian25-07-2025
The Palestinian journalists and videographers working with Australia's national broadcaster to bring us the stories from inside Gaza are hungry and weak, the ABC's Middle East correspondent Matthew Doran said this week. One colleague 'does not have the strength to hold a camera any more', has lost 34kg and can hardly talk on the phone, Doran wrote.
'And it could seriously impact how we can tell the broader story of the Gaza war.'
The scenes of aid seekers scrambling for food, babies lying silently in hospital beds and Palestinians protesting against Hamas for prolonging the war would be impossible without these Palestinian freelancers, Doran warned.
The ABC correspondent was among some of the world's biggest news outlets, including BBC News, Agence France-Presse (AFP), the Associated Press and Reuters who said they were 'desperately concerned' about the journalists in Gaza after widespread warnings of mass starvation.
With Israel denying international reporters access to Gaza, most of the world's news outlets rely on Palestinian freelancers to inform the world, but hunger and lack of clean water is making them ill and exhausted, with some telling agencies they are too weak to work.
'One of the biggest and most important stories in the world … will soon be more difficult to tell, as our colleagues struggle to help us tell it,' Doran said.
Doran's online analysis was accompanied by several broadcast reports on starvation on the 7pm bulletin across the week. 'The ABC has worked with a variety of independent journalists in Gaza over the past two years, but in recent weeks that has become increasingly difficult as displacement and starvation make it harder for journalists in Gaza,' a spokesperson for ABC News told Weekly Beast.
Sign up to get Guardian Australia's weekly media diary as a free newsletter
Meanwhile, the Murdoch campaign to denigrate if not privatise the ABC – 'a massive government-funded monstrosity' – continues apace.
According to Daily Telegraph columnist and blogger Tim Blair, an Australia without the ABC is 'beautiful' and we should follow the US administration's lead and defund public media.
In May, Trump issued an executive order blocking NPR and PBS from receiving taxpayer funds through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).
This week, federal lawmakers voted in support of the plan to claw back $1.1bn from the CPB, the umbrella organisation that helps fund both NPR and the non-commercial TV network PBS.
'Donald Trump's modern and visionary US government is now preparing to slash some $1.7bn from public media funding,' Blair wrote. 'That's an ABC-and-a-half delightfully subtracted from taxpayer outlay.
'Think of all the money we'd save, and all the economic, cultural and emotional energy we could direct instead towards the positive and productive.
'Also, think of all the ABC presenters who'd suddenly be able to reach much larger audiences just by shouting on public transport.'
Blair's view is not shared by the majority of Australians, who consistently rate the ABC's impartial coverage of local, national and global affairs as the country's most trusted news source.
The ABC news website is number one on the monthly Ipsos news rankings, with an audience of 13 million. The Daily Telegraph meanwhile comes in at 17, with 3 million. (Guardian Australia is sixth with 7.3 million.)
And this week, the ABC was celebrating 15 years of the ABC News channel, which is Australia's most watched news channel.
Another ABC critic, Gerard Henderson, is using his new platform on Murdoch's Sky News Australia to continue his decades-long criticism of Aunty. His campaign began in his tedious Media Watch Dog column in 1988 as a newsletter mailed out by the Sydney Institute.
The rightwing thinktank run by Henderson publishes his lengthy screed each week online, and for more than a decade it was republished by The Australian each Friday. The Australian stopped carrying Henderson's Media Watch Dog column late last year, but Hendo found refuge on the website of Sky News.
His new home also gave him access to Sky's media program where he appears to variously 'slam' ABC Insiders, 'question' why the ABC didn't cover Pete Hegseth's Pentagon press conference or 'torch' the ABC 'for continually promoting the Teals even after the election'. These videos are then published by The Australian. The Oz continues to carry his opinion column, which the paper picked up after the Sydney Morning Herald dropped it.
Victoria's deputy premier, Ben Carroll, was highly critical of the Daily Mail for publishing a claim on Tuesday that a child at a centre where alleged childcare paedophile Joshua Dale Brown worked had tested positive for an STD. At a press conference Carroll said the story was not true and the Department of Health had asked the publication to take it down.
'It is highly insensitive to families, and it is completely untrue,' Carroll said. 'From what we have advised, there is no child that has been tested positively for an STD. This must be horrifically traumatic for all families and parents involved in this, and we do hope that the author behind it makes contact with the Department of Health and gets their facts straight.'
The editor of the Daily Mail, Felicity Hetherington, did not comply with the request and the story remains online.
'As the article states, it is based on information provided by sources close to the investigation,' she told Weekly Beast. 'The article will be also updated to include Mr Carroll's comments.'
The lead paragraph of the story was amended to include the word 'reportedly' and the headline includes the deputy premier's denial.
'A child who attended a daycare centre where a worker was subsequently charged with more than 70 child sex offences has reportedly been infected with a sexually transmitted disease,' the new version says.
Influencer and fitness model Tammy Hembrow, 31, is a staple in the Daily Mail, where her outfits, relationships and workout routines provide near-daily fodder.
So when the Daily Mail reported this week that Hembrow's 'very revealing outfit' of 'a tiny silk crop top and matching skirt set by Arcina Ori' was worn to the Australian Financial Review magazine's 30th anniversary at the Sydney Opera House, we sat up and noticed.
The first edition of AFR magazine, in 1995, carried a cover story about how Australian dynasties preserved wealth, and not much has changed. The anniversary edition features a gold-foiled cover with its gatefold partner Rolex.
A celebration dinner at the Opera House's Bennelong restaurant, sponsored by Range Rover which ferried some guests to the venue, was attended by everyone from Malcolm and Lucy Turnbull and ABC chair Kim Williams to business leaders Robin Khuda of AirTrunk, Morgan Stanley chief executive Richard Stanley and the managing partner of Gilbert + Tobin, Danny Gilbert.
It turns out we should not have been surprised Hembrow was a guest. She held her own among the finance crowd, many of whom were members of the Rich List, Young Rich List and the Power List from the AFR.
In 2022, Hembrow's then $38m fortune saw her appear on the magazine's Young Rich List for the first time. She used social media to build businesses including fitness app Tammy Fit and clothing brand Saski Collection.
The latest rich list has her fortune at $56m.
Former ABC News Breakfast host Michael Rowland has paid tribute to his colleague Peter Ryan OAM, who died on Friday aged 64 from metastatic thyroid cancer.
We told you in June that Ryan, the ABC's senior business correspondent and a 45-year veteran of journalism, was retiring.
'When I last saw him in hospital a few weeks ago, Peter was full of old stories and good cheer, despite his health challenges, Rowland said. 'An avowed Beatles tragic, he gave me no shortage of tips and fun facts as I was heading off on a visit to Liverpool. It was an afternoon I will always treasure.'
Ryan leaves behind his wife, Mary Cotter, and daughter Charlotte.
Your reaction to a viral video published by the Nine Entertainment youth outlet Pedestrian TV probably depends on your age.
At a press junket for the movie The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Pedestrian reporter Rebekah Manibog casually asked one of the movie's stars, Vanessa Kirby, the following question: 'But jumping right into you, Vanessa, you've kind of become a social media icon for your forcefield, snatched, cunty fierceness face.'
Shock and confusion crossed Kirby's face as she interrupted Manibog's question with: 'Oh, oh my god, I don't know if that's a good thing.'
This article includes content provided by TikTok. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.
Her co-star, Pedro Pascal, saved the interaction by jumping in to explain the slang, which is apparently so common in queer and internet culture, the reporter felt comfortable throwing it into an interview.
'Cunty-face just means fierce, fabulous, beautiful, strong, it's good, it's good, I promise,' Pascal said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kemi Badenoch's position on Israel is discrediting the Conservative Party
Kemi Badenoch's position on Israel is discrediting the Conservative Party

New Statesman​

time24 minutes ago

  • New Statesman​

Kemi Badenoch's position on Israel is discrediting the Conservative Party

Photo byandWhen Kemi Badenoch became leader of the Conservative Party, she very sensibly aimed not to rush into early statements of detailed policy. Unfortunately, her appointment of Priti Patel as shadow foreign secretary was its own statement. Following her unauthorised 2017 trip to Israel while secretary for international development, Patel has been a disgraced figure. While there, accompanied by the peer Stuart Polak of the Conservative Friends of Israel, she met the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu without UK government officials or the British ambassador. Afterwards, she advocated a change in UK policy which, in breach of long-established humanitarian practice, would have included the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) in its aid delivery. This episode could not have been a starker example of impropriety. It merited her dismissal but Theresa May was too weak to wield the axe. Instead, Patel was allowed to resign. And yet, Badenoch saw fit to appoint her to the shadow cabinet. Patel is now in a position to perpetuate her views at a critical moment in world events. Badenoch has shown no indication of knowing anything about Israel and Palestine, and has not made any profound statements on this, the one foreign issue, other than Ukraine, that has dominated global news since she was elected. All she utters is uncritical support for Israel. The Conservative Party used to have a world-view. It supported enlightened international cooperation, and institutions such as the UN along with its accompanying treaties, rules and conventions. More broadly, it was the UK that pledged to support a homeland for the Jewish people, and a future for the Palestinians next door. To their shame, while successive governments have forever delayed implementing that commitment, the Israelis each and every day have violently stolen ever more Palestinian land. Palestine is the only populous legally undisputed land in the world not allowed to call itself a state. It does not belong to Israel, and Israel's determination to annex it does not mean it is disputed. The illegality of Israeli encroachment is cast-iron in international law, a belief that has been the policy of Conservative and Labour governments for decades. Badenoch, however, seems to share the view of those like Patel who do not believe in their own policy. They can never bring themselves to say explicitly that settlements are illegal. The charge sheet against Israel is growing every day: disproportionate force, indiscriminate bombing, mass displacement, food deprivation, the replacement of the Palestinian relief agency UNRWA with mercenaries, the killing of tens of Palestinians each day as they desperately scramble for food, state-backed support for settler terrorists, and the banning of journalists from Gaza. Badenoch and her front bench have done nothing to condemn any of it. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe [See also: Jonathan Sumption on Israel and Gaza: A question of intent] Amid all this, Priti Patel has refused in the Commons to condemn settler violence – all she would say was that settlers are a barrier to a two-state solution. And when extremist Israeli ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir were sanctioned in June, she declined in her response even to mention their names. The likes of Suella Braverman, meanwhile, have branded pro-Palestine demonstrations 'hate marches'. Contemptibly, any pro-Palestinian voice within the Conservative Party is almost systematically accused of anti-Semitism and put into its complaints procedure, which silences and bullies. And as Michael Gove increases his hold on appointments to the leader's office, what could be more warped than his recent recommendation that the IDF be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize? It has now reached the point where Conservative comment has become so extreme it has discredited their entire foreign policy and is making them despised more widely. The party is increasingly becoming defined by its lack of humanity. The world is watching the extermination of an entire country. Palestine is being annihilated. Meanwhile the Conservative Party is covering itself in shame, and will stand no chance of re-election unless it states a clear policy based on international law, and promotes the UK's historic understanding of the region. This issue is and always has been about land. Israel's extremist government has only one objective, and that is to make all of Palestine theirs. All other talk, horrendous though the facts may be, is second to that. As leader, Kemi Badenoch could redeem herself speedily by stating loudly what all should be saying to Israel: 'Get out of Palestine, it isn't your country.' [See also: Keir Starmer alienates left and right on Gaza] Related

Benjamin Netanyahu orders chilling 'Full occupation' of Gaza
Benjamin Netanyahu orders chilling 'Full occupation' of Gaza

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Benjamin Netanyahu orders chilling 'Full occupation' of Gaza

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday evening that a decision has been made for the entire occupation of the Gaza Strip, including operations in locations where hostages are kept Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Monday evening that a full-scale occupation of the Gaza Strip is underway, including operations in areas where hostages are being held. ‌ The Prime Minister's Office sent a stark message to Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir, the Chief of Staff: "If this does not suit him, you should resign." ‌ This move follows prolonged ceasefire-hostage talks involving Israel, Hamas, and intermediaries in Doha and pressure on Israel to make peace with Hamas. ‌ Netanyahu's directive to seize the disputed region comes shortly after Hamas broadcast a video depicting several gaunt hostages pleading for help amidst a severe famine. Hamas has consistently called for essentials like food and water to be allowed into Gaza as a precondition for resuming dialogue. ‌ The Iran-backed militant group has dismissed reports of Israel's intentions to conquer Gaza, calling the threats: 'Repetitive, worthless, and have no influence on our decisions.' The statement follows months of negotiations in Doha involving Hamas, Israel, and international mediators who are seeking a ceasefire-hostage agreement. The group is insisting that hundreds of aid trucks must be allowed into the Gaza Strip before it will return to talks, despite ongoing international efforts to deliver supplies to Palestinians through routes that bypass Hamas' control. Over the weekend, Hamas released videos of visibly emaciated hostages, claiming they are starving amid widespread famine in Gaza.

Israel says missile launched from Yemen intercepted
Israel says missile launched from Yemen intercepted

Reuters

time7 hours ago

  • Reuters

Israel says missile launched from Yemen intercepted

Aug 5 (Reuters) - The Israeli military said early on Tuesday it intercepted a missile from Yemen after air raid sirens sounded in several areas across the country. The Iran-aligned Houthi group, which controls the most populous parts of Yemen, has been firing at Israel and attacking shipping lanes. Houthis have repeatedly said their attacks are an act of solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. Most of the dozens of missiles and drones they have launched have been intercepted or fallen short. Israel has carried out a series of retaliatory strikes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store