Journalism leaders, including from Pakistan, express support for media covering Israel-Hamas war

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A photograph taken on January 30, 2024 in east London shows a graffiti made by street artist Ed Hicks, also known as @ed_hicks, depicting Palestinian citizen journalist, Plestia Alaqad, as part of a project launched by the art platform Creative Debuts called "Heroes of Palestine". (AFP/File)
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Jodie Ginsberg, President of CPJ Awards, speaks onstage at the 2022 CPJ International Press Freedom Awards at Glasshouses on November 17, 2022 in New York City. (AFP/File)
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Updated 01 March 2024
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Journalism leaders, including from Pakistan, express support for media covering Israel-Hamas war

  • At least 89 journalists and media workers have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war, the vast majority of them Palestinians
  • Committee to Protect Journalists says important to show journalism community stands in solidarity with Palestinian colleagues

NEW YORK: Three dozen leaders at news organizations around the world have signed a letter expressing solidarity with journalists in Gaza, calling for their safety and freedom to report in the war zone.

The letter, released Thursday, was spearheaded by the Committee to Protect Journalists, which said at least 89 journalists and media workers have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war, the vast majority of them Palestinians.

Leaders at The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Reuters, New Yorker, CNN, NBC News and ABC News have signed on. International signatories include the BBC, Der Spiegel in Germany, Agence France-Presse, Daily Maverick in South Africa, Nawaiwaqt Group in Pakistan and The Asahi Shimbun in Japan.

More organizations are welcome to participate, said Jodie Ginsberg, CEO of the Committee to Protect Journalists.

“We felt that it was important that we show that the international journalism community stands in solidarity with our Palestinian colleagues,” Ginsberg said.

The letter says that journalists are civilians and that Israeli authorities must protect them as noncombatants in accordance with international law. Anyone violating this should be held accountable, it said.

“Attacks on journalists are also attacks on truth,” the letter said. “We commit to championing the safety of journalists in Gaza, which is fundamental for the protection of press freedom everywhere.”

Israel is only mentioned once in the letter. While CPJ has advocated for more access for journalists in Gaza, the letter steered clear of that subject because it was important to focus on solidarity, Ginsberg said.

She would not comment on whether any news organization contacted chose not to participate.


Pakistan, China agree to step up counterterrorism coordination, hold regular security talks

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Pakistan, China agree to step up counterterrorism coordination, hold regular security talks

  • The interior ministers of both countries agree on quarterly working-group meetings, annual high-level talks
  • Islamabad says Beijing expressed satisfaction over protection of Chinese citizens and projects in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and China agreed on Wednesday to institutionalize closer collaboration on counterterrorism and internal security, committing to regular meetings and expanded coordination amid efforts by both countries to safeguard Chinese nationals and projects amid persistent militant threats in the region.

The agreement was reached during talks between Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi and his Chinese counterpart Wang Xiaohong at the headquarters of China’s Ministry of Public Security in Beijing, according to an official statement circulated in Islamabad.

China has raised concerns in the past over attacks targeting its citizens working on infrastructure and energy projects in Pakistan. Islamabad has stepped up security deployments and intelligence coordination in response, while Beijing has pushed for more structured and predictable security engagement.

“The two sides discussed joint counterterrorism measures, police training exchange programs and ways to expand cooperation in areas of mutual interest,” Pakistan’s interior ministry said in a statement, adding that the two officials agreed to hold working-level meetings every three months and annual talks at the interior ministers’ level.

Wang expressed satisfaction over Pakistan’s steps to protect Chinese citizens and projects, the statement added, praising Pakistan’s counterterrorism measures and internal security initiatives.

China also acknowledged Pakistan’s sacrifices in its fight against militancy, according to the statement.

Naqvi and Wang stressed the need to further improve coordination mechanisms to enhance operational cooperation between the two countries’ security agencies.

His meeting with his Chinese counterpart lasted for over three years.