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The numbers alone are dreadful. Journalists are being killed in the Israel-Hamas war at the rate of more than one every day since 7 October – at least 53 so far, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ.
This has been the deadliest period for journalists in the 30 years since the New York-based organization began keeping these dire statistics.
But, of course, it’s not all about the numbers.
There’s also the reality that the loss of journalists translates into less information. And that lies and propaganda love a void.
And, of course, there are the people themselves. Each with a life, a career, a family, hopes and a mission – now cut short.
It may help understanding to name some of the victims. According to CPJ, they include people like Roshdi Sarraj, a journalist and co-founder of Ain Media, a Palestinian company, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza.
Or the Israeli journalist Roee Idan, a photographer for the newspaper Ynet. He and his wife were killed in the Hamas attack on 7 October. He was working when he died. His four-year-old daughter, held hostage by Hamas for seven weeks, was released on Sunday.
Or Issam Abdallah, a Beirut-based videographer for Reuters, the international news agency, who was killed near the Lebanon border while documenting the shelling between Israeli forces and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.
“The world needs to know what is going on,” but that’s getting harder all the time, Clayton Weimers, the executive director of RSF (the international organization also known as Reporters Without Borders), recently said.
RSF’s representatives, in a meeting at the White House this week, urged Joe Biden to do more to support journalists.
The overwhelming majority of the dead appear to be Palestinian journalists killed in Israeli airstrikes. As of Monday, the CPJ reports that of the 57 journalists and media workers known to have died during the current war, 50 were Palestinian, four Israeli and three Lebanese.
RSF has pleaded with the Biden administration to put more pressure on the Israeli government to protect civilian lives, including those of journalists. RSF also objected to the difficulty of getting necessary supplies – chargers, phones and camera equipment – to those working in Gaza.
“Meanwhile, the journalists in Gaza cannot leave, and the only outside media permitted to enter have been invited to embed with the Israeli Defense Forces and submit to strict rules controlling what they can see and share,” the organization said in a statement.
While this embedded coverage is valuable, RSF notes, “it is no substitute for independent reporting”.
Especially painful to the broader journalism world is the loss of Belal Jadallah, the press freedom defender who made an important contribution to a CPJ report published in May, “Deadly Pattern”. It revealed a complete lack of accountability in Israeli military killings of journalists over the past two decades.
“His killing leaves a gaping hole in the media landscape in Gaza,” said Sherif Mansour, who coordinates CPJ’s Middle East programs.
The Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate believes that, given his work, Jadallah may have been targeted by the Israeli military – thus falling victim to the very pattern he helped to uncover and document.
CPJ tries to help by monitoring deaths, arrests and harassment, by providing protective gear, and by working to get journalists released from prison or detention. It publishes guidelines for reporting in conflict zones and for treating the physical and psychological trauma that often follows.
Perhaps most importantly, it raises awareness about what’s happening – and what goes missing when journalists are killed.
Jodie Ginsberg, the organization’s president, said in an interview on Sunday that due to the extreme dangers since the first week of October, “there was not a single international journalist working in Gaza” until very recent days.
That meant that nearly all the information getting to the world from inside Gaza was coming from Palestinian journalists – those who have apparently been targeted, or at least not protected.
CPJ has joined the calls for a humanitarian ceasefire to spare civilians.
“Journalists are civilians – it’s really important to remember that,” Ginsberg told Canada’s CBC News. “They have a vital role to play in any war and they need to be protected.”
But that’s not happening. The price is steep for individuals, for news organizations and for truth itself.
At the moment, Ginsberg said, journalists remain in serious peril and the numbers continue to mount.
“Nowhere in Gaza is safe.”