In yet another crime highlighting the growing pattern of attacks on civilian teams, four Palestinian journalists were killed and a fifth was critically wounded following a drone strike by Israeli forces targeting the grounds of the Baptist Hospital in Gaza City.
The victims were journalists Ismail Baddah, Suleiman Al-Hajjaj, Ahmad Qalja, and Samir Al-Rifai, while journalist Imad Daloul was severely injured. They were present near the hospital to document the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in the Gaza Strip.
The brutal strike occurred amid the continuing military assault by Israeli forces against Palestinian civilians in Gaza, a campaign that has increasingly taken on a systematic character consistent with the crime of genocide.
By targeting the grounds of a hospital, a location that should be protected under international law, particularly the Geneva Conventions, which oblige warring parties to spare medical facilities and journalists from hostilities, Israeli forces have once again demonstrated a blatant disregard for international humanitarian principles. This attack reflects a deliberate attempt to silence those documenting the atrocities on the ground.
The repeated targeting of journalists in Gaza, where hundreds have been killed or wounded since the start of the war, points to a deliberate strategy aimed at restricting media coverage and preventing the world from witnessing the full scale of what is happening on the ground.
The bombing of the Baptist Hospital cannot be separated from the broader context of the ongoing campaign of genocide waged against Gaza since 7 October 2023. The region continues to endure systematic killings, large-scale destruction of civilian infrastructure, and a suffocating blockade that denies over two million people access to food, water, and medicine.
In this context, the killing of journalists constitutes a compounded crime: a deliberate act of murder, an assault on truth, and a flagrant violation of the protections afforded to journalists under international law. Journalists are considered civilians during wartime, unless directly engaged in combat, and their targeting represents a serious breach of the laws of war.