KEY POINTS
- AP said it was “shocked and saddened” by the killing of its journalist
- 200 journalists have been killed in Gaza in the last two years: Media watchdogs
- Hossam Al-Masri, Mohammad Salama, Mariam Dagga and Moaz Abu Taha among the dead
ISLAMABAD: Gaza’s civil defence agency said four journalists among at least 15 people were killed on Monday when Israeli strikes hit Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis area of the besieged Gaza Strip.
Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said “the death toll is 15, including four journalists and one civil defence member”, after strikes hit Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis.
According to media watchdogs, around 200 journalists have been killed in nearly two years of war between Israel and Hamas.
When asked about strikes targeting a building at the medical complex, the Israeli military said it was checking the reports, according to AFP.
“In the line of journalistic duty”
The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate said a group of reporters had “been martyred in the line of journalistic duty, as a result of the Israeli bombing that targeted them at Nasser Hospital”.
In a statement, it named the reporters as photojournalists Hossam Al-Masri, Mohammad Salama and Mariam Dagga, and journalist Moaz Abu Taha.
A spokesperson for Qatar-based TV network Al Jazeera on Monday confirmed its photojournalist and cameraman Mohammad Salama was killed in the attack on the medical complex.
The three others worked with some Palestinian and international outlets, according to AFP journalists.
The Associated Press said Mariam Dagga was a freelancer for the news agency.
Reuters said that one of the journalists killed and one of those injured were contractors for the news agency.
The civil defence’s Bassal said an Israeli explosive drone targeted a building at Nasser Hospital, followed by an air strike as the wounded were being evacuated.
Smoke, bloodied bodies
AFP footage from the immediate aftermath of the attack showed smoke filling the air and debris from the blast on the floor outside the hospital.
Palestinians rushed to help the victims, carrying bloodied bodies and severed body parts into the medical complex. One body could be seen dangling from the top floor of the targeted building as a man screamed below.
A woman wearing medical scrubs and a white coat was among the injured, carried into the hospital on a stretcher with a heavily bandaged leg and blood all over her clothes.
Before the latest killings, media advocacy groups the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and Reporters Without Borders said around 200 journalists had been killed in the Gaza war.
Widespread condemnation
Earlier this month, four Al Jazeera staff and two freelancers were killed in an Israeli air strike outside Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, prompting widespread condemnation.
The CPJ slammed that strike, saying journalists should never be targeted in war.
“Journalists are civilians. They must never be targeted in war. And to do so is a war crime,” Jodie Ginsberg, chief executive of the CPJ, told AFP at the time.