Tag: Gaza

  • NGE condemns killing of journalists in Gaza

    NGE condemns killing of journalists in Gaza

    The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) has expressed concern over the increasing cases of journalists being targeted and killed in Gaza, describing the attacks as war crimes and a violation of international law.

    This is contained in a statement co-signed by its President, Eze Anaba, General Secretary, Onuoha Ukeh and made available to newsmen in Abuja on Thursday.

    The Guild strongly condemned the killing of five journalists – Husam al-Masri (Reuters), Mariam Dagga (Associated Press freelance), Mohammad Salama (Al Jazeera), Ahmed Abu Aziz (Middle East Eye), and Moaz Abu Taha, allegedly by Israeli forces through artillery and missile strikes.

    “These heinous acts are a blatant breach of international law, specifically the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I, which provide for the protection of journalists covering wars.

    “Targeting and killing journalists in Gaza constitutes a war crime and an unacceptable attempt to impede the work of journalists and conceal the truth from war areas.

    “We demand an immediate cessation of the targeting and killing of journalists in Gaza and other parts of the world, as well as an end to the war in Gaza,” the Guild said.

    The Guild urged the global community to launch thorough investigations into the killings and hold perpetrators accountable.

    It also reaffirmed solidarity with journalists working in dangerous environments, praising their courage and dedication to telling the world’s stories despite grave risks.

    Turning attention to domestic issues, the NGE also condemned the recent arrest and harassment of Nigerian journalists, including Azuka Ogujiuba, publisher of Media Room Hub, by the Nigeria Police Force over the coverage of a court case.

    “This is a clear attempt to silence journalists performing their lawful duties. We demand that the Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, halt the harassment and intimidation of journalists and respect their constitutional rights,” the Guild added.

    The Guild reiterated its call on government and security agencies to uphold constitutional provisions on press freedom and to allow journalists to carry out their duties without fear of reprisals.

  • They who are about to be murdered, greet you – By Owei Lakemfa

    They who are about to be murdered, greet you – By Owei Lakemfa

    Anas Jamal al-Sharif cried on air as he reported the on-going starvation of Gaza, a city of 2.1 million people. In so doing, he signed his death warrant. The regime in Israel said he was trying to mobilise the world against it by such sentiments.

    When the Israelis began to mount propaganda against Anas, it was clear that Tel Aviv had decided to kill him. That is the pattern: Israel begins by accusing a journalist of being a terrorist, and then moves in to murder him/her.

    The broader pattern of the Israeli genocide machinery is to bomb homes and schools, claiming they shelter terrorists. When it kills children, the claim is that they are used as human shields by Hamas. When in order to starve the Gaza population into submission, it bans food convoys by all groups, including the United Nations, UN; it claims it is because they are cover for terrorists.

    When it wilfully levels hospitals and kills the sick, including babies in incubators, it claims there are terrorist bunkers under them. Never mind that it has not produced a single bunker under the hospital rubbles.

    Anas had also committed the crime of refusing to move out of Northern Gaza as directed by the Israeli military.

    Given these nightmarish experiences of the Gaza populace, Anas knew his execution for not just being a witness to these inhuman crimes, but also documenting and exposing them, was just a question of time. Some of his colleagues and friends had already been eliminated in similar ways.

    So, on April 6, 2025, the 28-year-old wrote his will. It was not to leave any house for his children. The will was not to transfer money to his equally young family. The will was, basically, a testament affirming that the Israeli regime would  murder him.

    So, Anas began his will with these words: “This is my will and my final message. If these words reach you, know that Israel has succeeded in killing me and silencing my voice”.

    He then tells us, the living, his motives: “Allah knows I gave every effort and all my strength to be a support and a voice for my people, ever since I opened my eyes to life in the alleys and streets of the Jabalia refugee camp. My hope was that Allah would extend my life so I could return with my family and loved ones to our original town of occupied Asqalan (Al-Majdal). But Allah’s will came first, and His decree is final.”

    He then established his undeniable credentials as a journalist: “I have lived through pain in all its details, tasted suffering and loss many times, yet I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification—so that Allah may bear witness against those who stayed silent, those who accepted our killing, those who choked our breath, and whose hearts were unmoved by the scattered remains of our children and women, doing nothing to stop the massacre that our people have faced for more than a year and a half.”

    Anas entrusted we the living with his people, especially “its wronged and innocent children who never had the time to dream or live in safety and peace. Their pure bodies were crushed under thousands of tons of Israeli bombs and missiles, torn apart and scattered across the walls.”

    He also entrusted us with his family, including his  beloved daughter Sham, “the light of my eyes, whom I never got the chance to watch grow up as I had dreamed (and) my dear son Salah, whom I had wished to support and accompany through life until he grew strong enough to carry my burden and continue the mission.”

    He equally entrusted us with his beloved mother, and  wife, Umm Salah (Bayan), “from whom the war separated me for many long days and months. Yet she remained faithful to our bond, steadfast as the trunk of an olive tree that does not bend—patient, trusting in Allah, and carrying the responsibility in my absence with all her strength and faith.”

    To conscientious humanity Anas wrote: “I urge you not to let chains silence you, nor borders restrain you. Be bridges towards the liberation of the land and its people, until the sun of dignity and freedom rises over our stolen homeland.”

    In July 2025, an international media organisation warned Anas he was about being eliminated. On Sunday, August 10, 2025, as Anas and some of his colleagues rested in an Al-Jazeera media tent outside the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza, the Israeli military struck, killing Anas and three other Al Jazeera staff. They were correspondent Mohammed Qreiqeq,  and cameramen, Ibrahim Zaher and Mohammed Noufal. For the Israeli regime, these others were a mere collateral damage.

    Once the anger of the world boiled over these criminal murders, the Israeli propaganda machine went into over drive. Hours after the mass killings, the Israeli Defence Force, IDF, international Spokesman Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani,  pushed out a statement claiming without  providing any concrete proof that Anas was “the head of a Hamas terrorist cell and advanced rocket attacks on Israeli civilians and IDF troops.”

    In its tradition of concocting tales without proof, the Israeli regime claimed thus: “Intelligence and documents from Gaza, including rosters, terrorist training lists and salary records, prove he was a Hamas operative integrated into Al Jazeera.”

    The murderers claimed Anas was the commander of a rocket-launching squad in northern Gaza. If, without conceding, this were true, why also kill at least three other persons?

    Part of the Israeli ‘evidence’ was a photograph allegedly showing Anas with the late Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar. How does a journalist meeting a political leader in his country prove he was working for the latter or his group?

    Not unexpectedly, the UN was engaged in its usual rigmarole. Even with Israel confirming that it consciously and wilfully murdered the journalists, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres  was busy calling for  an “independent and impartial investigation into these latest killings.” Assuming Guterres was unaware that Israel had owned up to the killings, now that this has been confirmed, what will the world body do to bring the Israeli leaders to justice?

    This is more so as these latest martyrs of freedom of speech are among the 242 journalists and media workers Israel has murdered since the latest Gaza War began on October 7, 2023.

    Israel had 15 months before gotten a  sniper to eliminate another Al Jazeera journalist, Ms  Shireen  Abu  Akleh, as she stood amongst fellow journalists.

    Israel’s murder of journalists and the defenceless, cries to the Heavens and, unless called to order, it will continue in its inglorious tradition of impunity and crimes against humanity.

  • Outrage as Israel’s security cabinet approves Gaza city take over

    Outrage as Israel’s security cabinet approves Gaza city take over

    Israel’s Security Cabinet has approved a plan to take over Gaza City, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said in a statement on Friday.

    The Israel Defense Forces would prepare for the takeover while distributing humanitarian assistance to civilians outside the combat zones, according to the statement.

    With a majority vote, the cabinet adopted the five principles for “concluding the war”: the disarming of Hamas; the return of all the hostages, both the living and the deceased and the demilitarisation of the Gaza Strip.

    Other principles include demilitarisation of Israeli security control in the Gaza Strip; and the establishment of an alternative civil administration that is neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority.

    A decisive majority of Security Cabinet ministers believed that the alternative plan that had been submitted to the cabinet would neither achieve the defeat of Hamas nor the return of the hostages.

    The statement did not elaborate on the plan but appeared to refer to a proposal by military chief Eyal Zamir, who opposes occupying the Gaza Strip, citing concerns over a humanitarian disaster and the safety of hostages.

    Israel intended to take control of all of Gaza to “assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza,” Netanyahu said.

    “We don’t want to keep it. We want to have a security perimeter. We want to hand it over to Arab forces that will govern it properly without threatening us and giving Gazans a good life,” he said.

    In response, Hamas said in a statement that it considers Netanyahu’s statements to represent “a clear reversal of the course of negotiations and reveal the true motives behind his withdrawal from the final round.”

    At least 9,752 Palestinians have been killed and 40,004 others injured since Israel renewed its intensive strikes in Gaza on March 18, bringing the total death toll since October 2023 to 61,258, and injuries to 152,045, Gaza health authorities said.

    Israel ‘wrong’ to escalate war with Gaza City takeover plan – Starmer

    Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said Israel is “wrong” to approve plans to occupy Gaza City, and urged it to reconsider the new offensive.

    Starmer’s intervention comes after Benjamin Netanyahu’s war Cabinet approved plans for a major escalation in the conflict.

    The Israeli plan stops short of fully taking over all of Gaza, as had been touted ahead of the war Cabinet meeting. But Starmer insisted Israel should de-escalate, rather than launch the operation.

    Starmer said: “The Israeli government’s decision to further escalate its offensive in Gaza is wrong, and we urge it to reconsider immediately.

    “This action will do nothing to bring an end to this conflict or to help secure the release of the hostages. It will only bring more bloodshed.”

    He added: “Every day the humanitarian crisis in Gaza worsens and hostages taken by Hamas are being held in appalling and inhuman conditions.

    “What we need is a ceasefire, a surge in humanitarian aid, the release of all hostages by Hamas, and a negotiated solution. Hamas can play no part in the future of Gaza and must leave as well as disarm”.

  • Riot at Gaza aid site leaves 20 dead – GHF

    Riot at Gaza aid site leaves 20 dead – GHF

    Twenty people were killed during a riot at an aid distribution point in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday morning, according to the U.S.- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

    In a statement, the private foundation said that 19 of the victims were trampled to death, while one person was fatally stabbed.

    “We have credible reason to believe that elements within the crowd,  armed and affiliated with Hamas, deliberately fomented the unrest,” the GHF stated.

    According to the foundation, the incident occurred at a distribution center in the southern city of Khan Younis.

    GHF personnel claimed they observed firearms among those gathered. A U.S. staff member was allegedly threatened at gunpoint by an individual in the crowd.

    The foundation’s account has not been independently verified, and the Palestinian Islamist organization Hamas has not issued a comment.

    The GHF, which began operating at the end of May with backing from Israel and the U.S., currently oversees food distribution in the Gaza Strip following months of Israeli restrictions on aid deliveries.

    However, the foundation has come under sharp criticism from the United Nations and humanitarian organizations, who argue that it operates too few distribution points. This, they say, creates chaotic conditions that place civilians at serious risk.

    Fatal incidents near aid distribution sites have been reported repeatedly in recent weeks.

    While the Israeli military has often been accused of opening fire in previous cases, the latest incident has not been linked to military action.

    According to the UN, hundreds of people have died at or near GHF-run distribution centers since the foundation began operations.(

  • Israeli tank shellfire kills 51 Palestinians

    Israeli tank shellfire kills 51 Palestinians

    Health ministry on Tuesday reported that Israeli tank shellfire killed at least 51 Palestinians as they awaited aid trucks in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

    The ministry added that dozens of others were wounded.

    According to medics, more than 200 people were wounded, with at least 20 of them in critical condition.

    There was no immediate comment by the Israeli military on the incident.

    Witnesses said Israeli tanks fired at least two shells at thousands of people awaiting aid trucks.

    Nasser Hospital wards were crowded with casualties, and medical workers ad to place some on the ground and in corridors due to the lack of space.

    The incident was the latest in nearly daily mass deaths of Palestinians who were seeking aid in past weeks, including near sites operated by the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

    Local health officials said at least 23 people were killed by Israeli gunfire on Monday as they approached a GHF aid distribution site in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

    The GHF stated in a press release on Monday that it had distributed more than three million meals at its four distribution sites without incident.

    There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military about Monday’s reports of shootings.

    In previous incidents, it has occasionally acknowledged troops opening fire near aid sites while blaming militants for provoking the violence.

    Israel has put responsibility for distributing much of the aid it allows into Gaza into the hands of the GHF which operates sites in areas guarded by Israeli troops.

    The United Nations has rejected the plan, saying GHF distribution is inadequate, dangerous and violates humanitarian impartiality principles.

    The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered in October 2023, when Palestinian Hamas militants attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, according to Israeli allies.

    Israel’s subsequent military assault on Gaza has killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s health ministry, while internally displacing nearly Gaza’s entire population and causing a hunger crisis.

    The assault has also triggered accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and of war crimes at the International Criminal Court.

    Israel, however, denies the accusations.

  • Israeli navy hits Yemen first time in Gaza war

    Israeli navy hits Yemen first time in Gaza war

    The Israeli navy struck targets in Yemen for the first time since the Gaza war began 20 months ago, targeting Houthi militia facilities at the port of Hodeidah, the military announced Tuesday.

    “The strikes were conducted following the aggression of the Houthi terrorist regime toward the State of Israel, including the launch of surface-to-surface missiles and drones toward Israeli territory and its citizens,” the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement.

    The operation aimed to prevent the continued use of Hodeidah port for military purposes. While the Israeli Air Force had repeatedly targeted the area over the past year, the military said the port had remained a key hub for Houthi arms shipments and operations.

    The IDF accused the Houthis of “cynical exploitation of civilian infrastructure.”

    On Monday evening, an Israeli army spokesman issued a warning in Arabic urging evacuation from three Houthi-controlled ports, including Hodeidah.

    There were no immediate reports of casualties.

    Since the Gaza war began in Oct. 2023, the Iran-backed Houthis had launched repeated rocket and drone attacks on Israel in support of Hamas.

    Israel had frequently responded with airstrikes on Houthi positions in Yemen.

  • Swedish activist Greta Thunberg deported from Israel

    Swedish activist Greta Thunberg deported from Israel

    Greta Thunberg, along with nearly a dozen other activists, was deported from Israel after their sailboat, attempting to deliver aid to Gaza, was intercepted by the Israeli military.

    The Israeli Foreign Ministry confirmed her departure on Tuesday, stating: “Greta Thunberg just departed Israel on a flight to Sweden (via France)”.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Israeli Foreign Ministry posted the statement on X, accompanied by a photo of the 22-year-old boarding the plane.

    Earlier in the day, the ministry had announced that Thunberg and several other passengers from the intercepted boat had arrived at Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv to return to their home countries.

    According to local media, three other activists were also scheduled to leave Israel. However, eight others remained in custody after refusing to sign deportation documents, according to a report by Israeli news outlet ynet.

    Among those still detained is Rima Hassan, a French member of the European Parliament. The report added that the eight will remain in a detention centre near the airport until they agree to sign the documents—or until 96 hours have passed since their initial detention.

    Interior Minister Moshe Arbel has prohibited all the activists from officially entering Israel.

    The group had set sail from Sicily aboard the Madleen, a vessel organized by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC), carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza. Their aim was to draw attention to the humanitarian crisis and pressure Israel to end its military campaign.

    Gaza has faced severe shortages of food and aid after more than three months under an Israeli blockade, which has only recently begun to ease.

    However, the Madleen was intercepted by Israeli forces early Monday under orders from Defence Minister Yoav Gallant. The FFC reported that the vessel was forcibly boarded in international waters, with the crew detained and the aid cargo seized.

    FFC organizer Huwaida Arraf condemned the detentions as unlawful, stating that Israel had no jurisdiction over the volunteers in international waters.

    In response, Israel’s Foreign Ministry dismissed the mission as a “provocation”, referring to the vessel as a “selfie yacht.”

  • Gaza: UN pays tribute to 168 staff killed in 2024

    Gaza: UN pays tribute to 168 staff killed in 2024

    The United Nations on Thursday paid tribute to the 168 staff members who lost their lives in 2024.

    They include 126 personnel killed in Gaza, all but one of whom served with the UN agency that assists Palestine refugees, UNRWA.

    Ahead of a memorial service at UN headquarters in New York, Secretary-General António Guterres told journalists that the men and women being honoured “were not just names on a list” but “extraordinary individuals – each one a story of courage, compassion, and service.”

    “They were driven by the pursuit of peace. By the urgency to ease human suffering. And by the conviction that every person, everywhere, deserves dignity and protection,” he said, speaking in front of the Security Council chamber.

    He acknowledged that the past year has been especially devastating for UN humanitarian workers.

    “More than one in every 50 UNRWA staff in Gaza has been killed in this atrocious conflict. This is the highest staff death toll in United Nations history,” he said.

    “Some were killed delivering life-saving aid; others alongside their families; others while shielding the vulnerable.”

    The secretary-general said the sacrifice of all 168 fallen colleagues was a tragedy but also a reminder of the responsibility carried by every staff member every day.

    It is important for the world to see this, he added, “because as we mourn those lost, we must also recognise the living.”

    Guterres saluted staff members still serving in crisis zones across the globe for their courage and resilience.

    “And to the world, I say: we will not grow numb to suffering. We will not accept the killing of UN personnel.

    “We will not accept the killing of humanitarians, journalists, medical workers, or civilians as the new normal anywhere and under any circumstances.

    “There must be no room for impunity,” he said.

    Since 2011, the UN has held an annual service at Headquarters to honour personnel who have lost their lives in the line of duty during the previous year.

    Those who paid the ultimate price in 2024 worked with UNRWA, the UN Secretariat, the UN refugee agency UNHCR, the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS), and the World Food Programme (WFP).

    They came from 31 countries and were teachers, engineers, doctors, administrators, humanitarians, peacekeepers, and more. Above all, they were sons and daughters, husbands and wives, fathers and mothers, and brothers and sisters.

    Shortly after the briefing, the secretary-general joined some of their relatives, UN staff members and senior officials for the memorial service in the Trusteeship Council. Many others across the world followed the event online.

    The secretary-general noted that working for the UN “is far more than just a job” – it’s a calling.

    “All our fallen colleagues answered the call to serve humanity,” he said. “They did so in their own ways – without fanfare – and with determination.  They represented humanity in action.”

    He remarked that “at a time when some may question international cooperation or the very notion of multilateralism, we would all do well to remember these lives taken far too soon.”

    “Let us take inspiration from how they lived,” he said. “And let us vow that the memory and mission of our fallen colleagues will endure. They were the best of us. Let them live on through our work.”

    The president of the UN Staff Union in New York, Narda Cupidore, echoed this message.  She said they embodied the mission of the whole UN “and they paid the ultimate price.”

    “Let this honouring be more than a moment of silence,” she said.

    “Let it be a call for action. A call to protect those who serve. A call to ensure that anyone who serves under the blue flag does so with the full protection, support and respect.”

    Cupidore said the legacy of the fallen colleagues “lives on in our work, in our advocacy and in our unshakeable belief that the world is worth striving for.”

  • Gaza: Journalist death toll rises to 225 amid ongoing strikes

    Gaza: Journalist death toll rises to 225 amid ongoing strikes

    The number of journalists killed in Gaza since Oct. 2023 has risen to 225, the media office of the Gaza government said on Thursday.

    “Since the beginning of the war of extermination against the Palestinian population, the number of killed journalists has increased to 225 after the deaths of four more people,” the statement read.

    “We call on the International Federation of Journalists, the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, and journalistic organisations worldwide to condemn these systematic crimes against Palestinian journalists and media workers in the Gaza Strip.”

    Earlier on Thursday, Tahseen al-Astal, deputy director of the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, told RIA Novosti that four media workers from Arab satellite TV channels were killed in an Israeli airstrike.

    The strike reportedly targeted their tent near the al-Ahli Arab Baptist Hospital in Gaza City.

    The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS) condemned the killings and called for an immediate investigation into their deaths.

    According to the Gazan Ministry of Health, more than 4,400 Palestinians have been killed and more than 13,400 injured in the enclave since March 18.

    Israel resumed its strikes on Gaza that day, citing Hamas’ refusal to accept a U.S.-brokered plan to extend a ceasefire and release hostages. The truce had expired on March 1.

    In early March, Israel also cut off electricity to a key desalination plant in Gaza and blocked the entry of humanitarian aid trucks.

  • Gaza war: France blocks arms shipment to Israel

    Gaza war: France blocks arms shipment to Israel

    Workers at a port in southern France are blocking a shipment of 14 tonnes of military equipment bound for Israel, their union announced on Thursday.

    This is coming after President Emmanuel Macron said he will decide “in the next couple of days” whether France will harden its position against Israel and take concrete steps over the Gaza war.

    According to the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), the workers refused to handle the cargo in protest against what they described as “the ongoing genocide being perpetrated by the Israeli government.”

    The shipment, reportedly destined for the Israeli port of Haifa, includes machine gun parts produced by a company in Marseille.

    The CGT alleges that these components are being used by the Israeli military against Palestinians in Gaza.

    The union said it had identified and isolated the container at the port of Fos-sur-Mer, near Marseille.

    France’s Defence Ministry stated that Israel is contractually required to re-export the military equipment and is not permitted to use the components itself, according to a report by France Info.

    The dockworkers’ action has received backing from several left-wing French politicians.

    Manuel Bompard, national coordinator of the France Unbowed party, lauded the move on X (formerly Twitter), writing: “Glory to the dockworkers in the port of Marseille-Fos who are refusing to load spare parts for machine guns that were supposed to be delivered to the Israeli army.”

    Olivier Faure, leader of the Socialist Party, also expressed support, stating: “Humanism is not for sale.”

    The Gaza conflict has so far claimed the lives of at least 54,000 Palestinians, according to figures from the Hamas-run health ministry.

    The war was sparked by the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks on Israel, during which around 1,200 people were killed and more than 250 taken hostage.