NEW YORK: A new documentary purports to name the Israeli soldier who killed Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh, who was gunned down in the West Bank while reporting in 2022.
Abu Akleh, a Palestinian-American journalist known for her coverage of the Arab-Israeli conflict, was shot dead in Jenin in the north of the occupied West Bank while she worked, wearing a bulletproof vest marked “press.”
Al Jazeera and witnesses immediately blamed the Israeli army. Then Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett said it was probable the shots had come from Palestinian militants.
In the weeks that followed, several journalistic investigations pointed the blame at Israeli gunfire.
Months later, Israel released an internal investigation that found a “high probability” that Abu Akleh was accidentally shot by the Israeli army, which claimed it was targeting armed Palestinians.
Produced by independent news site Zeteo, the documentary “Who killed Shireen?” names for the first time the suspect as Alon Scaggio, an elite soldier.
“Israel did everything it could to conceal the soldier’s identity, they wouldn’t provide the US with any information. They wouldn’t let the US interview him. They wouldn’t give the US his statement. And they wouldn’t give his name,” said Dion Nissenbaum, a journalist who worked on the film.
Assisted by producer Conor Powell and reporter Fatima AbdulKarim — who worked for The New York Times in the West Bank — Nissenbaum, a former Wall Street Journal correspondent, consulted testimony from two Israeli soldiers present in Jenin on May 11, 2022 as well as top US officials.
The documentary alleges that Scaggio, then 20, had completed training for the elite Duvdevan unit just three months prior.
“He shot her intentionally. There’s no question about that. The question is did he know she was a journalist and did he know she was Shireen Abu Akleh? Was it an order from above?” Nissenbaum told AFP.
“Personally, I don’t think it was an order. I don’t think he knew it was Shireen. Nobody ever has indicated that he could tell that it was Shireen. But she was wearing the blue flak-jacket with the word ‘press’ on it.”
“The evidence (suggests)... it was an intentional killing of Shireen Abu Akleh. Whether or not they knew it was her or not can very well be debated, but they would have absolutely known that it was a media person or a non-combatant at a minimum,” said a senior official from the administration of then US president Joe Biden, speaking in the film anonymously.
Washington did not exert significant pressure on the issue, the documentary claims, for fear of antagonizing its ally.
Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen said he called on Biden to declassify documents about the killing — but went unanswered.
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said “it is the first time that a potential suspect has been named in connection with an Israeli killing of a journalist” according to its records dating back to 1992.
Impunity in the case “has effectively given Israel permission to silence hundreds more” journalists, the CPJ said.
Reporters Without Borders estimates around 200 journalists were killed in the past 18 months of Israeli strikes on Gaza.
An Israeli army spokesman condemned the unauthorized disclosure of the suspect’s name despite no “definitive determination” of who shot Abu Akleh.
The soldier in question “fell during an operational activity,” the army added.
Nissenbaum had initially thought Scaggio died in Gaza, but ultimately concluded he was killed in Jenin on June 27, 2024 almost two years after Abu Akleh.
Film claims to name killer of slain journalist Shireen Abu Akleh
https://arab.news/yekff
Film claims to name killer of slain journalist Shireen Abu Akleh
- Produced by independent news site Zeteo, the documentary “Who killed Shireen?” names for the first time the suspect as Alon Scaggio, an elite soldier
Keep it real: Tech giants urged to lead on safeguarding online privacy
- AI, deepfakes, misinformation under scrutiny at Bridge Summit
- Media, tech professionals discuss how to keep users safe
ABU DHABI: As AI-generated deepfakes and bots grow more sophisticated, online privacy and identity protection have become urgent global concerns, especially for journalists, influencers and media professionals, whose lives unfold in the digital spotlight.
The growing threats of impersonation, character assassination and coordinated online abuse was at the center of a high-stakes conversation on the second day of the Bridge Summit in Abu Dhabi, where regional and international leaders from the technology and media fields tackled the complex risks surrounding digital safety, security and trust in an AI-powered world.
Adeline Hulin, chief of unit, media and information literacy at UNESCO, highlighted the risks that many people, in particular children and women, are facing online.
Although her work has long centered on promoting safe internet practices, she said that the onus of safeguarding online privacy and security rested primarily with technology companies — the only actors, she argued, capable of keeping pace with the rapid evolution of AI.
“It is going to be really important that instead of people constantly having to adapt to the technology, if the technology itself is more user-centric,” she told the summit.
“We can train people to recognize deepfakes, but technology can do that quicker.”
Major tech companies have come under fire in recent years for failing to tackle harassment and misinformation. This has led to a litany of legislation as governments try to gain control of a growing problem.
But some companies appear to be heeding the call. Erin Relford, senior privacy engineer at Google, said her company was working to embed privacy protections in the infrastructure level beneath the platform.
“We want to give consumers the choice of how much they can share data-wise,” she said.
“The biggest challenge is making sure you have the right people in the room to create these privacy protection platforms.”
Privacy enhancement technology would see several tools released that empowered users to understand how their data was being monetized and aggregated, Relford said.
Google had been working to change the parental controls and make it easier for users to understand their protection, she said, but admitted it was still difficult and more education was needed.
“Most of the power lies within the user. Consumers drive what is popular. In terms of organizations that protect your privacy, we want to encourage them and use their services rather than empowering websites that don’t,” she said.
Education is key
Still, Relford argued that education was fundamental in rolling out privacy tools. Tech companies could only do so much if people did not increase their awareness online, she said.
“The better we educate people about privacy tools, the less harm we have from the ground up.”
Echoing similar sentiments, Hulin promoted the idea of including online literacy in school curricula. Even high-profile moves, like Australia’s recent headline-grabbing ban on under-16s using social media, would do little to reduce the risks without more education.
“Even if there is banning, it’s not going to change misinformation and disinformation. You still need to teach these kids about the information ecosystem,” she said.
“Parents need to be really interested in the news information that your children are consuming.”
Assel Mussagaliyeva-Tang, founder of Singapore-based startup EDUTech Future, said that the AI revolution demanded close collaboration between schools, universities and families to equip children with the skills to navigate new technologies safely and responsibly.
“We need to set up the guardrails and protection of the kids because they are not aware how the model will respond to their needs,” she said.
A UNESCO survey found that 62 percent of digital creators skip rigorous fact-checking, while a 2024 YouGov study showed only 27 percent of young adults feel confident about AI in education.
Mussagaliyeva-Tang said educators needed to focus on preparing and nurturing adults who were “ready for the world,” by integrating ethics, data literacy and critical thinking into curricula.
But she said that universities and the broader education system remained behind the curve in adapting to emerging technologies and equipping students with the skills needed for responsible digital engagement.
Likewise, tech companies needed to be transparent and inclusive in training their data in a way that represented different cultures, she said.
While global regulations on AI remain fragmented, Dr. Luca Iando, dean and distinguished chair at the Collins College of Professional Studies at St. John’s University, called on educational institutions to actively collaborate with technology platforms to help shape educational content and mitigate the potential harm of AI on children, especially as technologies continue to grow.
He warned of young people’s overreliance on AI and said that educators in the long term needed to focus on developing “durable, human skills” in students and transform the type of assignments and coursework to meet the new age of AI.
There needed to be guidelines for students on using AI responsibly, to prepare them for the workplace, he said.
Highlighting the skills gap between educational institutions and the modern workplace, Mussagaliyeva-Tang said: “Employers want professionals. They don’t have time and the budgets to retrain after the outdated curriculum of the university.”
The rise of AI demanded a rethinking of the true purpose of education to nurture individuals who strove to make a positive impact on a rapidly evolving world, she said.









