Europe
2024.01.11 20:48 GMT+8

Israel claims killed journalists were 'terror operatives' as Blinken arrives in Cairo on diplomatic tour

Updated 2024.01.11 20:48 GMT+8
Matthew Nash

Rainbows are seen in the sky near the Israel-Gaza border, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Southern Israel. /Tyrone Siu/Reuters

Israel's army has claimed two Al Jazeera journalists it killed in an air strike in Gaza were "terror operatives."

Hamza Wael Dahdouh and Mustafa Thuria, who also worked as a video stringer for AFP and other news organisations, were killed on Sunday while they were on an assignment for the Qatar-based channel in the city of Rafah.

The army said in a statement on Wednesday its "intelligence has confirmed that both the deceased were members of Gaza-based terrorist organisations actively involved in attacks against IDF (army) forces." It added: "Prior to the strike, the two operated drones, posing an imminent threat to IDF troops."

There was no immediate reaction available from the television channel and families of the two men. When asked on Wednesday what kind of drones were used by the two men and the nature of the threat the drones posed to Israeli troops, the army said it was "checking."

It said Thuria was identified in a document found by troops in Gaza to be a member of Hamas's Gaza City Brigade, while Dahdouh was identified as a "terrorist" belonging to Islamic Jihad.

The army statement included a copy of a document it said was a list of "operatives from an electronic engineering unit of the Islamic Jihad, including Dahdouh and his military number."

Dahdouh and Thuria were killed when the car they were travelling in was hit by two rockets on a street in Rafah, according to witnesses. A third journalist and the driver of the car were wounded. Thuria, in his 30s, had contributed to AFP since 2019 and had also worked with other international media outlets.

He and Dahdouh had been tasked with filming the aftermath of a strike on a house in Rafah and their car was hit while they were on their way back, AFP correspondents said at the time.

Soon after the strike, Al Jazeera said it "strongly condemns the Israeli occupation forces' targeting of the Palestinian journalists' car," accusing Israel of "targeting" journalists and "violating the principles of freedom of the press."

In a brief statement, Hamas's press office said the army's claims were false and that Israel "creates false pretexts to justify its massacres and crimes against Palestinian civilians and journalists."

A Palestinian boy walks near a destroyed building which was hit in an Israeli air strike, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. /AFP

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Hamza's father Wael al-Dahdouh, Al Jazeera's Gaza bureau chief, was recently wounded in a strike himself after his wife and two other children were killed in Israeli bombardment in the initial weeks of the conflict.

Soon after Dahdouh and Thuria were killed, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said their deaths were an 'unimaginable tragedy'. "And that's also been the case for... far too many innocent Palestinian men, women and children," Blinken said.

On Monday, Wael's two nephews Ahmed al-Dahdouh and Muhammad al-Dahdouh were also killed in a strike when travelling in a car in Rafah, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.

The conflict in Gaza erupted when Hamas militants stormed across Gaza's border into Israel in an unprecedented attack on October 7 which left some 1,140 people dead, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Israel has vowed to eradicate Hamas, denounced as a terrorist group by the United States and European Union, and has kept up a relentless bombing of Gaza, which the Hamas-run health ministry says has killed at least 23,357 people, mostly civilians.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists says at least 79 journalists and media professionals, the vast majority Palestinian, have been killed since the escalation began.

South Africa's Minister of Justice Ronald Lamola, lawyer Adela Hassim and the delegation stand as judges at the International Court of Justice hear a request for emergency measures by South Africa, who asked the court to order Israel to stop its military actions in Gaza. /Thilo Schmuelgen/Reuters

Southern Gaza bombarded

Israel bombarded the southern Gaza Strip overnight, as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived Thursday morning in Cairo for a final stage of his diplomatic marathon in the Middle East devoted to the conflict in the Gaza Strip, according to journalists accompanying him.

Arriving from Israel, Blinken was to meet Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi, before flying to the US after visiting nine countries, including Türkiye and Saudi Arabia, as well as then in the occupied West Bank, calling to avoid a flare-up of the conflict in Gaza.

The Middle East trip, his fourth aimed at preventing the conflict's spread, coincided with a UN Security Council resolution on Wednesday demanding an "immediate" end to attacks in the Red Sea by Yemen's Huthi rebels carried out in solidarity with Hamas.

It also comes as Israel was set to face accusations brought by South Africa at the UN's top court on Thursday that it has committed "genocidal" acts in Gaza, charges both Israel and Blinken have dismissed as baseless.

Hamas's press office said early on Thursday that 62 people had been killed in strikes overnight, including around Gaza's main southern city of Khan Yunis. Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari said in his evening briefing the night before that forces were continuing "to act decisively above and below ground" in the area.

Earlier in the day, the army said troops east of the city had found "tunnel shafts, tunnel routes, and numerous weapons and materials" and killed "dozens of terrorists."

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said an Israeli strike on an ambulance in central Gaza killed four medics and two other passengers on Wednesday. The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the incident when contacted by AFP.

In Deir al-Balah, also in central Gaza, people wounded in a strike at a nearby school were brought to the Al-Aqsa hospital. "There are injured people at the school since last night, no cars or ambulances are reaching it - nothing," Ramadan Darwit told AFP at the hospital.

Israeli fire flares over Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. /AFP

'Israel's physical destruction'

South Africa has claimed Israel has deliberately imposed conditions on Gaza that cannot sustain life and are calculated to bring about physical destruction. The International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, is hearing arguments that Israel is committing genocide in its conflict on Gaza.

South Africa says Israel is subjecting Palestinian people to apartheid and has a genocidal intent against Palestinians in Gaza. It added that it condemns the targeting of civilians and taking of hostages by Hamas on October 7.

Israel will appear before the ICJ "to dispel South Africa's absurd blood libel," an Israeli Government spokesman said.

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Source(s): AFP
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