Palestine: Israeli forces close Al Jazeera office in the occupied West Bank

The Israeli army raided the bureau of the Qatari media network Al Jazeera in Ramallah, the occupied West Bank during a live broadcast on 22 September. The soldiers handed a military court order to the bureau chief, forcing the newsroom to shut down its operations for 45 days. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) joins its affiliate, the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS) in condemning the latest act of censorship by the Israeli government, which is not only a deliberate attack on media freedom and the public’s right to know, but also a clear infringement of international law.

Screenshot of Al Jazeera's YouTube. Credit: Al Jazeera's YouTube.

Al Jazeera’s broadcast live footage of the raid, where heavily-armed soldiers are seen seizing equipment and confiscating documents from the office.   

Israel’s Communications Minister, Shlomo Karhi, announced the closure of Al Jazeera’s bureau in the occupied West Bank, calling the channel “the mouthpiece of Hamas and Hezbollah”. According to a statement issued by the Israeli military, the order follows an intelligence assessment that determined that the offices were allegedly used “to incite terror, to support terrorist activities”. 

 

The move is the latest in a long list of Israeli government’s actions targeting Al Jazeera. On 12 September, the government announced the revocation of the press credentials of Al Jazeera’s journalists, following the ban on the channel operating in Israel imposed on 5 May. This was strongly condemned by the IFJ and PJS. 

"Israel is trampling on international law by shutting down a media outlet in a territory that it illegally occupies," stated IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger in an interview with Al Jazeera. The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) passed a resolution on 18 September demanding an end to Israel’s occupation of Palestine within the next twelve months by an overwhelming margin, following the ruling from the International Court of Justice.

 

Since the beginning of the war in Gaza, on 7 October 2023, the Israeli government has intensified policies to censor critical media outlets that do not conform to the official narrative over “security concerns”. On 13 November, it blocked access to the Lebanese TV channel Al Mayadeen, in line with the emergency regulations approved on 20 October, that allow the temporary ban of media outlets alleged to “undermine national security”.

The PJS released a statement condemning the raid and closure of Al Jazeera’s bureau. “This military decision is a new aggression against journalistic work and the media outlets that have been reporting the crimes against the Palestinian people [...] The PJS expresses its full solidarity with Al Jazeera’s journalists and puts its headquarters at the service of colleagues working at the channel”. 

IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger expressed full support from 600,000 media professionals represented by the IFJ across the world for Al Jazeera’s editorial staff in Ramallah. “The policy of this Israeli government is to silence any voice that might contradict its official narrative. They have destroyed all the media in Gaza, targeted and killed journalists only because they were doing their job and now they want to wipe out the media in the occupied West Bank [...]  The international community must take action to put an end to the ongoing massacres of civilians and attacks on the media which are a clear violation of international and humanitarian law.

 

"The Israeli Defense Forces really have no business in zone A of the West Bank, that should be wholly under the control of the Palestinian Authority. And the site of fully armed combat troops bursting into a broadcast office and ordering them out of at ten minutes' notice is absolutely horrific. It is a grievous blow media freedom in Palestine - one of a succession of blows that have been dealt by the Israeli Defense Forces and the Israeli government,"said IFJ Deputy General Secretary Tim Dawson in an interview with BBC World. 

For more information, please contact IFJ on +32 2 235 22 16

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