‘Ongoing ban preventing international journalists from Gaza suffocates truth even further,’ says Guterres
GENEVA — The UN secretary-general on Friday said the killings of journalists since the Gaza war began are “unacceptable,” urging for the protection of the press.
Antonio Guterres’ remarks came in a message read at the opening of the UN International Media Seminar on Peace in the Middle East 2024 in Geneva.
Noting that this seminar is being held under “profoundly difficult circumstances” as the war in Gaza marked one-year last month while the violation spread to Lebanon, Guterres said: “At the same time, the situation in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, continues to deteriorate with Israeli military operations, construction of settlements … , intensification of settler attacks that progressively undermines any possibility of a two-state solution.”
“Journalists in Gaza have been killed at a level unseen in any conflict,” he said, and lamented: “The ongoing ban preventing international journalists from Gaza suffocates the truth even further.”
He did not forget to mention several of those who have also been killed or injured, covering key stories impacting the occupied West Bank.
“This is unacceptable,” he underscored. “The voices of journalists must be protected and press freedom must be safeguarded.”
He reiterated his call to end the war and the occupation.
He said: “It is high time for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza and Lebanon with the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, the effective delivery of humanitarian aid, and irreversible progress to a two-state solution.”
Lack of accountability lets Israel to continue committing ‘war crimes’ against journalists
Palestine’s permanent representative to the UN, New York, told the seminar that the lack of accountability enables the continuation of Israeli attacks against journalists, urging states to elevate pressure against Tel Aviv.
“When journalists and press are under fire, then every human right is under threat,” Riyad Mansour said, noting that this deliberate targeting of Palestinian journalists and the press is against the “collective right to know the truth about its unlawful obligation of Palestine.”
Mansour honored the memory of “182 Palestinian journalists” who lost their lives in the Gaza Strip and recalled this year’s UNESCO World Press Freedom prize, which is given to all Palestinian journalists covering the war in Gaza, “sharing the strong message of solidarity and recognition to their courage and fearlessness.”
“Accountability is a key to deterrence, and the lack of it has, of course, led Israel to continue committing such war crimes against Palestinian journalists,” he said. “Let’s elevate the pressure for enforcing an immediate cease-fire. Let’s keep the pressure high until every civilian life in Gaza is safe and relief is delivered. Let’s match their (journalists) courage with courage.”
All the participants took a stand and applauded the journalists’ courageous work in Gaza upon the envoy’s invitation.
Cheikh Niang, the permanent representative of Senegal to the UN and chairman of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, for his part, said that Israeli attacks as well as limitation on movement, checkpoints and destruction of infrastructure have made it “increasingly difficult for both local and international journalists to operate.”
“Despite this, journalists in Gaza continue to report on the humanitarian crisis, often a great personal risk providing the world with an accurate picture of the unfolding tragedy,” Niang said, praising their work
In addition to the physical risks, journalists today face rising challenges like disinformation, cyberattacks and increasing restrictions, he stressed.
According to the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, 173 journalists have been killed while covering the war since Oct. 7, 2023.
Israel has continued a devastating offensive on Gaza since an attack last year by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas, despite a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire.
More than 43,200 people have since been killed, mostly women and children, and over 101,600 others injured, according to local health authorities.
Israel faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its actions in Gaza.