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Friday, 6 June 2025
BBC journalists held at gunpoint and strip-searched by Israeli military, says broadcaster.
Feras
Kilani stands in front of Syrian security forces in Damascus, two days
before he was detained by Israeli forces to the south. (Supplied by the BBC)
In short:
A
team of BBC journalists have been held at gunpoint, blindfolded and
strip searched by the Israeli Defence Force in the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights, the BBC claims.
BBC
Arabic special correspondent Feras Kilani was a part of the crew, which
included freelancers and three BBC staff members, stopped at a
checkpoint in Quneitra, inside the buffer zone between Israel and
Syria.
What's next?
The broadcaster said it has registered a complaint with the Israeli military over the incident but has not had a response.
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A
team of seven BBC journalists and staff claim to have been held at
gunpoint, blindfolded and strip searched by the Israeli Defence Force in
the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
The
BBC said its crew, which included staff members and three freelancers,
were stopped while filming at a checkpoint in Quneitra, inside the
buffer zone between Israel and Syria.
"BBC
News Arabic correspondent Feras Kilani, along with three other BBC
staff members and three freelance colleagues, were detained for seven
hours and held at gunpoint by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF)," a BBC
statement said.
"The team have described how they were tied up, blindfolded, strip searched, interrogated and threatened."
BBC Arabic special correspondent Feras Kilani was a part of the crew and described his experience on the BBC website.
He
said that minutes after starting to film at the checkpoint, four IDF
soldiers "pointed their rifles at our heads and ordered us to place the
camera on the side of the road."
From
there, he claims he and his crew were escorted by the soldiers through a
barrier and into the city of Quneitra where the soldiers reviewed the
footage, all while keeping rifles aimed at their heads.
The journalists claim they were stopped by IDF soldiers just minutes after starting to film at a checkpoint near Quneitra city. (Reuters: Avi Ohayon)
The BBC said electronic devices were taken from the team and material was deleted.
After
hours passed, Mr Kelani says he was asked "why we were filming Israeli
military positions" by a person not known to him on a phone call made by
one of the soldiers.
He said he was then separated from his team and told by a lead IDF officer that he had to comply with their instructions.
The first of those demands, he claims, was to remove all his clothes except for his underwear for a search.
Mr
Kelani said soldiers "inspected even inside my underwear, both front
and back, searched my clothes, then told me to put them back on and
started interrogating me."
After
the interrogation, Mr Kelani claims he was led back outside where he
saw "the horrific scene of my team members, tied up and blindfolded".
He claims he asked officers to release them, but they were each taken inside for a strip search and questioning.
After
seven hours of detention by the IDF, Mr Kelani claims he and his team
were told if they approached the frontier from the Syrian side again
there would be "worse consequences".
He
says that the crew were then dropped two kilometres outside the city,
given back their electronic devices and left to find their way back.
The BBC has said said it "strongly objects to the treatment of our staff and freelancers in this way."
"Despite
making clear to the soldiers on multiple occasions they were working
for the BBC, the behaviour they were subjected to is wholly
unacceptable," the BBC statement said.
The broadcaster said it has registered a complaint with the Israeli military over the incident but has not had a response.
The ABC has contacted the IDF for comment but has not yet received a response.
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