Extract from ABC News
Anas al-Sharif joined Al Jazeera just months after Israel's war in Gaza began. (Facebook: Anas al-Sharif)
Al-Sharif greeted the announcement of a Gaza ceasefire deal in December by taking off his press protective gear.
His final report was published after he was killed — his will and a final message.
"If these words reach you, know that Israel has succeeded in killing me and silencing my voice," he said.
"I urge you not to let chains silence you, nor borders restrain you. Be bridges toward the liberation of the land and its people, until the sun of dignity and freedom rises over our stolen homeland."
'If you are reading this, it means that I have been killed'
A journalist inspects the remnants of the tent where Al Jazeera's Anas al-Sharif and four others were killed by an IDF air strike. (Reuters: Mahmoud Issa)
Anas al-Sharif is not the first Palestinian journalist to have written his own obituary.
In March, his Al Jazeera colleague Hossam Shabat was killed by an Israeli drone strike on the car he was travelling in through northern Gaza.
Like al-Sharif, the 23-year-old had written a note to be released in the event of his death, beginning with "if you are reading this, it means that I have been killed".
The note, which detailed his sleepless nights, hunger and struggles to document the war, concluded:
"I will finally be able to rest, something I have not been able to do for the past 18 months."
Both men are now on a long list of journalists Israeli forces have targeted after claiming they were affiliated with terrorist organisations, while providing little credible evidence.
In October 2024, they were among six Palestinian Al Jazeera journalists that Israel accused of involvement with Hamas or Islamic Jihad militant groups, on the basis of what it said were documents seized from Gaza.
The documents were unable to be independently verified, and Al Jazeera called the accusation "a blatant attempt to silence the few remaining journalists in the region".
Al-Sharif, centre, carries the body of Hossam Shabat, a colleague killed by the IDF, in March. (Middle East Images: Abood Abosalma)
Shabat described the accusations as "fabricated dossiers framing us" and a "blatant and belligerent attempt to transform us, the last witnesses in the north, into kill-able targets".
Exactly five months later, he was killed by Israeli forces, while travelling in a car emblazoned with the "TV" and "Al Jazeera" labels.
Other examples of journalists accused of terrorism and targeted by Israeli forces include Yaser Murtaja, who had been vetted by the US government to receive a USAID grant, and Ismail al-Ghoul, who would have had to have received a Hamas military ranking at just 10 years old, according to an IDF-produced document.
Jodie Ginsberg from the CPJ told the ABC it was part of a pattern seen from Israel not only during the current war, but whenever Israeli forces have killed Palestinian journalists.
"It then subsequently alleges, without providing any credible evidence, that they are terrorist operatives and we've seen that in the case of Anas al-Sharif and a number of our journalists killed in this war," she said.
"Unusually in this war, we've seen Israel allege that journalists are terrorists ahead of time — in what Anas and other journalists have said, and we have said, seems to be a precursor to their killing, justifying their murders."
Losing eyes and ears on the ground
Israel has not allowed international media to independently enter Gaza since October 7.
With foreign journalists locked out of the enclave, the world has been relying on Palestinian media workers to report on the war — but their numbers are dwindling.
The CPJ has said this is the deadliest conflict for journalists it has ever documented, with more than 186 journalists having been killed.
Of those, at least 178 were Palestinians killed by Israel.
Anas al-Sharif reports for Al Jazeera from the Gaza Strip earlier in the conflict. (Al Jazeera)
Ginsberg said at least 17 were deliberately targeted as journalists for their work, and it's clear there is no protection available to those who remain.
"We are extremely concerned that we are going to simply see more and more of these deaths as the offensive in Gaza continues," she told the ABC.
Directing attacks against journalists is considered a violation of international humanitarian law and constitutes a war crime.
Nasser Abu Bakr, from the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, described Monday's killings as a "massacre".
"This is a black day for Palestinian journalists," he said.
"It is systematic killing and systematic targeting of our journalists in Gaza from the Israeli government.
"It will not prevent us to continue our duty. We are professional journalists and … we are determined to continue our work under fire, under starvation, without any equipment to show the people what's happening on the ground."
Ginsberg pointed out that journalists are also not immune from the other issues facing the entire population of Gaza.
"They are subject to starvation, continual displacement, the deterioration of equipment [and] communications blackouts, whilst trying to report on a war that is deeply impacting them personally," she said.
Last month, news agency Agence France-Presse asked Israel to allow the immediate evacuation of its freelance contributors and their families from Gaza, after they said they were struggling to work due to the threat of hunger.
They joined the Associated Press, BBC News and Reuters in a rare statement voicing concern about journalists remaining in the territory, which read:
"We are desperately concerned for our journalists in Gaza, who are increasingly unable to feed themselves and their families.
"For many months, these independent journalists have been the world's eyes and ears on the ground in Gaza.
"They are now facing the same dire circumstances as those they are covering."
No comments:
Post a Comment