Skip to content

Topic: CNNSyndicate content

Palestinian territories - Israeli soldiers fire on news photographers during East Jerusalem clashes

February 11, 2010 by Anonymous

Anonymous's picture

Around 10 of the journalists who went to cover a major Israeli military operation in the Shu'fat refugee camp, in East Jerusalem, were targeted by Israeli soldiers firing tear-gas grenades, stun grenades and rubber bullets on 8 and 9 February.

“Everything indicates that Israeli soldiers deliberately fired on the journalists,” Reporters Without Borders said. “And this is far from being the first time. Will the Israeli authorities ever put a stop to the impunity allowed to their soldiers? We urge the Israeli military to investigate and punish those responsible. Otherwise this sort of disgraceful incident will keep recurring.”

Many journalists were wounded while covering the Israeli search and arrest operation in the refugee camp on 8 February. As the major military deployment got under way, clashes broke out between young Palestinians and Israeli soldiers near a checkpoint at the main entrance to the camp.

Diala Jwihan, a photographer for the Qudsnet website, was injured in the stomach by a grenade fired by an Israeli soldier and was taken unconscious to hospital. “I was covering the clashes from a relatively distant place when a soldier fired a grenade in my direction,” she said after leaving the hospital.

Reuters photographers Sinan Abu Mizer and Amar ‘Awad, Falestin TV cameraman Nader Pepers and CNN cameraman Karim Khadr were also injured by tear-gas grenades or rubber bullets, while Al Jazeera cameraman Samir Abou Al-Gharbiya was injured by a projectile fired by a young Palestinian.

Khadr said: “I was with other journalists in the camp when Israeli soldiers tried to prevent us covering what was going on. Then they fired a stun grenade that injured my ankle and left hand. Ten minutes later, the soldiers fired rubber bullets at us. One of them hit my hand after ricocheting off a wall.”

Three other photographers – Atta ‘Awissat and Mahmoud Alyan of the newspaper Al-Quds and Ahmed Al-Gharably of AFP – were injured in the Shu'fat camp on the evening of 9 February while covering further clashes between camp dwellers and agents who had been infiltrated by the Israeli military. The photographers, who were taken to Muhal'afati hospital, said soldiers deliberately targeted them and tried to take their equipment.

Located in the northern part of East Jerusalem and housing more than 25,000 Palestinian refugees, the Shu'fat camp is cut off from the rest of the city by a separation wall. Residents wanting to leave or return to the camp have to pass through one of two military checkpoints established on the western side. It is the only refugee camp located within the limits of the municipality of Jerusalem.

Nidal Ishtiyeh, a photographer working for a Chinese news agency, was meanwhile injured on 6 February by rubber bullets fired by Israeli soldiers outside Iraq Burin, a village to the south of the West Bank city of Nablus. He had gone there to cover clashes between villagers and Israeli settlers who had vandalised wells used by the village's farmers to irrigate their lands.

Four news agency journalists – Ma'an photographer Rami Swidan, Pal Media photographer Ashraf Abu Shawish, Reuters photographer Abdelrahim Al-Qusini and Reuters cameraman Hassan Titi – were attacked by Israeli soldiers on 28 January in the nearby village of Burin when they went to cover clashes between settlers and olive growers.

Haiti destruction via high quality Google Earth images

Haiti - Google Earth updated their images again on Haiti, the update happened on 17 January and the US helicopters landing on the presidential palace ground cannot yet be seen but the total de

IDF Footage of Rescue of Hatian Girl from Collapsed Building

 IDF search and rescue forces continued their search for survivors of the earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, last night.

Lou Dobbs: Bring US troops home now (USA)

Lou Dobbs left CNN the other day, there's already reports of him running for US president in the near future but for now he started petition on his site calling for all US troops over the world to

Lou Dobbs quits CNN after 30 years - Video

"Some leaders in the media, politics and business have been urging me to go beyond my role here at CNN and engage in constructive problem-solving."

CNN Launches Interactive News App for Iphone

CNN, the No. 1 mobile news provider according to Nielsen, today announced the availability of its CNN App on the App Store.

What will happen if swine flu comes to Africa?

I am not a doctor and I don't have any degrees so remember this as you read. This is an article based on things I read, see and think.

Mexico has a very good health system where most medical is for free and they actually have doctors, and the virus is hardly being contained. Africa has some of the best doctors in the world but unfortunately it is also so expensive most people cannot even afford basic medical care. If you go to the local state hospitals most of them are overrun and understaffed as it is.

Susan Boyle singing on Larry King live CNN : 'My heart will go on'

April 19, 2009 by Daizy

Daizy's picture