Gunmen storm independent news agency amid continuing impunity in Gaza

Armed men attacked the headquarters of a Palestinian press agency in Gaza City Tuesday, employees said. The militants, most of them masked, broke into the offices of Palmedia and scared staff with aimless gunshots before seizing a computer and television editing equipment. Injuries were not reported.

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) Wednesday condemned the impunity with which journalists are being attacked in the Gaza Strip after the incident in Gaza City, now the epicentre of violence against the press in the Palestinian Territories.

Sali Abeid, a Palestinian presenter of programmers during her presentation at Palestine Television in Gaza June 4, 2007. A group that emerged this year, the Righteous Swords of Islam, has threatened to "slit the throats" of women presenters on Palestine TV if they do not cover their hair. (Reuters/Suhaib Salem)

No attempt has been made to identify and punish those responsible for the many attacks on news media and journalists by armed groups, the Palestinian Authority’s security forces and the Executive Force of Prime Minister Ismael Haniyeh’s party, Hamas, since the start of the year, RSF regretted.

“The entire journalistic profession is now paying dearly for the instability in the Palestinian Territories resulting from the clashes between Hamas and Fatah,” RSF said. “Violence against journalists in Gaza City is left unpunished. Not only have the Palestinian authorities proved powerless to restore order in the Gaza Strip but their security services are themselves often involved in the attacks on the press.”

Many of Palmedia’s journalists were present when around 20 gunmen stormed into their offices firing shots in the air. They left 25 minutes later taking computers, telephones and transmission equipment. No security forces intervened although the news agency is located less than 50 metres from the headquarters of the Palestinian Authority’s general security department and less than 500 metres from President Mahmoud Abbas’ offices.

There have been 15 attacks against journalists in Gaza City since the start of the year. Two journalists, Suleyman Al-Aashi and Mohammed Mattar Abdu of the pro-Hamas daily Filistin, were killed near the headquarters of the Fatah militias on 13 May. Three journalists have also been kidnapped and one of them, BBC correspondent Alan Johnston is still being held hostage.

A poster of the missing BBC journalist Alan Johnston, who disappeared in Gaza on March 12, is displayed during the World Economic Forum in the King Hussein Convention Centre at the Dead Sea May 18 2007. A television cameraman held prisoner for years at the U.S. Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has issued an impassioned plea for the release of a fellow journalist kidnapped in Gaza. (Reuters/Ali Jarekji)

At least eight news media have also been attacked on ransacked. In February, for example, members of the Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the ruling Hamas party, and members of the Hamas government-controlled Executive Force overran the studios of radio Al Aamal in Gaza City, destroying equipment and putting its broadcasting antennae out of commission.

An obscure Islamist group has even threatened to behead female television broadcasters if they do not wear strict Islamic dresses. The threat to “cut throats from vein to vein” was delivered by the Righteous Swords of Truth, a fanatical group that has previously claimed responsibility for bombing Internet cafes and music shops. The new threat was the first time the organisation targeted a specific group of people.

 
 
Date Posted: 6 June 2007 Last Modified: 6 June 2007