News group stopped sharing Gaza locations with Israel after ‘so many journalists’ killed in IDF strikes

Posted by Molly Hunter | 6 hours ago | News | Views: 25


JERUSALEM — “So many journalists were killed in IDF strikes,” international news agency Reuters has told NBC News, that it stopped sharing the locations of its teams in the Gaza Strip with the Israeli military.

The news agency’s cameraman, who regularly operated its live position on the roof of Nasser Hospital, was one of 5 journalists among 22 people killed in an Israeli attack on the facility Monday.

“In the early days of the conflict, Reuters, like other news outlets, shared the locations our teams would be using in an effort to ensure they would not be targeted by the [Israel Defense Forces],” a spokesperson for the London-based news organization, one of the world’s largest, told NBC News late Wednesday.

This included sharing on “multiple occasions” that its journalists were operating out of Nasser Hospital, where the strikes were caught on video by the Arabic-language channel Al Ghad TV.

Image: PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT
People mourn over the bodies of journalists Moaz Abu Taha, left, and photojournalist Hussam al-Masri, a Reuters contractor, right, who were killed in an Israeli strike on Nasser Hospital on Monday.AFP via Getty Images

“We subsequently desisted from giving precise coordinates of our teams after so many journalists were killed in IDF strikes,” added Reuters, which has said it ran a live feed from the site for the last 18 months.

In response to a request for comment on the Reuters statement, the IDF said it had “no further comment beyond the statement that has been put out.” Soon after the incident, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it had been a “tragic mishap.”

In a statement Tuesday, the IDF claimed that an initial inquiry found that troops had identified a camera at the hospital that was being used to observe its troops “in order to direct terrorist activities against them.” It added that “troops operated to remove the threat by striking and dismantling the camera.”

Image: PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT-GAZA
People gather outside Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on Monday, following Israeli strikes.AFP via Getty Images

According to five journalists on the ground there was only one camera — Reuters’ — at the top of the hospital. A senior Hamas official has claimed it did not have a camera in the area.

The Israeli military, which did not provide evidence to substantiate the claims that Hamas ran a camera on the roof of the hospital or address the multiple strikes on the facility, added that an investigation had been ordered into “several gaps” including the “authorization process” before the attack.

According to the internationally recognized Committee to Protect Journalists, 197 journalists have been killed in Israel’s assault on Gaza since it began less than two years ago, making it the deadliest conflict for journalists the CPJ has documented.

Israel has barred the international media from entering Gaza since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 attack, except for occasional tours chaperoned by the IDF.

On Wednesday Dr. Mohammed Saqer, director of nursing at Nasser Hospital, said that the IDF should have been aware that the area it was targeting at the hospital was a hub for Palestinian journalists inside the enclave.

“It’s not a secret place. It’s like a clear place, obvious place. Everyone can see this place. Even the Israeli army, by their own drones or by their own cameras, they can see Hussam and other journalists working from the fourth floor. So it’s not a secret,” he said, referring to Hussam al-Masri, the Reuters cameraman killed in the attack.

He added, “The IDF knows our numbers. Yes, sometimes they call us. So if the IDF has any objection about the presence of Hussam and other journalists on the third floor, on the fourth floor, I think they could have contacted us and we could have fixed the issue.



NBC News

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