MIDDLE EAST CRISIS: Israeli air strike kills 3 Lebanese journalists, military says it targeted 1
Israeli forces killed three Lebanese journalists in southern Lebanon on Saturday in an air strike that Israelâs military said had targeted one of the reporters, with a followâup strike on the rescue workers sent to help them also causing deaths.
Lebanonâs health ministry said medics were directly targeted en route to the scene of an earlier strike on journalists.
More than 50 medical workers have been killed in Lebanon, including nine in the past day alone, in what the ministry described as an âescalating paceâ of Israeli attacks on healthcare workers and facilities.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It has accused Hezbollah of using medical facilities for military purposes and warned it would attack hospitals if the group does not change course.
WHO condemns attacks on health workers
World Health Organization director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X in response to the killings that health workers were protected under international humanitarian law and âshould never be targetedâ, without mentioning Israel.
Israeli strikes killed two soldiers in the Lebanese army in the south on Saturday, the Lebanese military said on X.
The Israeli military said on Saturday that the Air Force had struck more than 100 targets in Lebanon since Friday.
Saturdayâs strike is the first time Israel has acknowledged killing a journalist in Lebanon.
Lebanese television news channel Al Manar said its reporter Ali Shaib and reporter Fatima Ftouni from Lebanese pan-Arab broadcaster Al Mayadeen, were killed when their vehicle was hit. Lebanonâs information minister, Paul Morcos, said later that Ftouniâs brother, Mohammed, a cameraman, had also been killed.
Israelâs military said it had killed Shaib, whom it called a âterroristâ, in a targeted strike, accusing him of being part of a Hezbollah intelligence unit, and said he had reported on locations of Israeli soldiers in Lebanon.
The military statement, which also accused Shaib of âincitementâ against Israeli soldiers and civilians, did not mention the other journalists or provide evidence to support its assertion that Shaib was a member of a Hezbollah intelligence unit.
Hezbollah, which controls Al Manar, denied Shaib was part of one of its intelligence units.
âThe enemyâs false claims are nothing but an expression of its weakness and fragility, and a desperate attempt to evade responsibility for this crime,â it said.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun described the journalists as âcivilians doing their professional dutyâ.
âIt is a brazen crime that violates all treaties and norms through which journalists enjoy international protection in war,â he said on X.
More than 1,180 people have been killed in Lebanon since US and Israel attacked Iran, according to the countryâs authorities, who do not otherwise distinguish between civilians and militants.
âGrowing risks to journalistsâ
Al Manar described Shaib as an âicon of resistance reportingâ. Al Mayadeen, which is widely perceived as editorially aligned with Hezbollah, and Iranâs allies and supporters in the region, said Ftouni had been distinguished by her brave and objective reporting.
In response to the killings, Reporters Without Borders said it had been raising the alarm for weeks about the growing risks facing media professionals.
The killings followed the death of Hussain Hamood, a Lebanese freelance journalist working for Al Manar who the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said on X was killed in an Israeli air strike on Wednesday.
At least three other reporters in Lebanon, Iran and Gaza have been killed in Israeli or joint US-Israeli air strikes since the Iran war began on 28 February, CPJ said on Thursday. The US military did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did the Israeli military.
An Israeli strike in October 2024 hit a collection of guesthouses housing only reporters in the southern Lebanese town of Hasbaya, killing two journalists from Al Mayadeen and one from Al Manar, prompting global condemnation. DM
(Additional reporting by Jaidaa Taha, Maya Gebeily and Alexander Cornwell. Editing by Joe Bavier, Timothy Heritage and Louise Heavens)
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