- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Muhannad Tutunji, Haitham Abudiab and their BBC Arabic team were driving to a hotel when their car was intercepted.
They were dragged from the vehicle - marked “TV” in red tape - searched and pushed against a wall.
A BBC spokesperson said journalists “must be able to report on the conflict in Israel-Gaza freely”.
Mr Tutunji and Mr Abudiab said they identified themselves as BBC journalists and showed police their press ID cards.
While attempting to film the incident, Mr Tutunji said his phone was thrown on the ground and he was struck on the neck.
“One of our BBC News Arabic teams deployed in Tel Aviv, in a vehicle clearly marked as media, was stopped and assaulted last night by Israeli police. Journalists must be able to report on the conflict in Israel-Gaza freely,” a BBC spokesperson said.
The BBC has contacted Israeli police for comment.
While I don’t know about precision strikes, they haven’t been warning civilians before striking these past few days, and in fact many times designated an evacuation destination and bombed it. And don’t get me started on the white phosphorus. They’re definitely not avoiding civilian deaths (I mean why would you try to avoid the deaths of “human animals”). Oh, and I don’t see how holding journalists at gunpoint has anything to do with minimizing casualties.
Israel has been genocidal for a while now, but they’ve been going full holocaust recently.