Israel-Gaza war impact gets harder to document

Smoke rises from the southern Gaza city of Rafah following Israeli airstrikes on May 6, 2024. (Reuters/Hatem Khaled)

As the Israel-Gaza war enters its eighth month, the verification of information about journalists killed, injured, and arrested, has slowed to a crawl.

A CPJ report finds that the unprecedented number of deaths, with more than 90 Palestinian journalists killed by Israeli forces since the start of the war, displacement, and censorship are all making it exponentially harder for the organization’s researchers to confirm information about the conflict’s devastating impact on Gaza’s media community – and, by extension, about the broader impact of the war.

“At the start of the war it would take us a day or two to verify information about a journalist who had been killed or injured,” said CPJ Program Director Carlos Martínez de la Serna. “Collecting and vetting this information is now taking us weeks or months, and in some cases won’t be possible at all.”

Reasons for the slowdown include the decimation of Gaza’s media community, communications blackouts, and food and fuel shortages.

CPJ: Authorities must allow journalists to safely cover US campus protests
FOX 7 Austin photojournalist Carlos Sanchez arrested and being led away by authorities on April 24. (Photo: KXAN/YouTube)
FOX 7 Austin photojournalist Carlos Sanchez was arrested on April 24 while covering a protest at the Universty of Texas at Austin. (Photo: KXAN/YouTube)

With tensions over pro-Palestinian protests escalating on college campuses across the United States, the Committee to Protect Journalists calls on university authorities and law enforcement agencies to allow reporters to freely cover the demonstrations.

“Journalists – including student journalists who have been thrust into a national spotlight to cover stories in their communities — must be allowed to cover campus protests without fearing for their safety,” said CPJ U.S., Canada and Caribbean Program Coordinator Katherine Jacobsen on Wednesday. “Any efforts by authorities to stop them doing their jobs have far-reaching repercussions on the public’s ability to be informed about current events.”


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Journalists Attacked

Shireen Abu Akleh

MURDERED

Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian American correspondent for Al Jazeera Arabic, was fatally shot while covering an Israeli army operation in the West Bank town of Jenin. In the two years since her May 11, 2022 death, no one has been held accountable.

Multiple investigations into her death concluded that the veteran reporter — a household name in the region — was shot by a member of the Israel Defense Forces, which said its troops were in the area “to arrest suspects in terrorist activities.” Some of those in-depth analyses, including one by CNN, said there was evidence that Abu Akleh — who was wearing a vest marked “Press” — was deliberately targeted.

Israeli authorities deny that any soldier shot intentionally at the journalist. Abu Akleh’s case has been submitted to the International Criminal Court by the Palestinian Authority, her family, and Al Jazeera.

In at least 8 out of 10 cases, the murderers of journalists go free. CPJ is waging a global campaign against impunity.

The Committee to Protect Journalists promotes press freedom worldwide.

We defend the right of journalists to report the news safely and without fear of reprisal.

journalists killed in 2024 (motive confirmed)
imprisoned in 2023
missing globally