‘World treating us with indifference,’ Renowned Gaza journalist Wael Al-Dahdouh says

Al-Dahdouh warned that the world must not assume the horrors unfolding in Gaza are distant or irrelevant. (AFP/File)
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Updated 11 September 2025
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‘World treating us with indifference,’ Renowned Gaza journalist Wael Al-Dahdouh says

  • Al Jazeera’s Gaza bureau chief lost his wife, 3 children and grandchild in airstrikes
  • Lack of media coverage ‘more painful than being at the receiving end of missiles and bullets’

LONDON: A journalist who runs Al Jazeera’s bureau in Gaza has accused the international community of treating the victims of Israel’s war with indifference, amid the ongoing tragedy in the Gaza Strip and West Bank.

In an interview with Sky News, Wael Al-Dahdouh reflected on his personal loss.

“Why should I lose my wife, my lifelong friend and partner, my son, my daughter?” he said.

Al-Dahdouh’s wife Amna, 15-year-old son Mahmoud, 7-year-old daughter Sham and grandchild Adam were killed during an airstrike on the Nuseirat camp in October, where they had sought refuge after being displaced from their homes.

He learned of their deaths while live on air, in a moment that became emblematic of the war’s personal and professional toll. Weeks later, his eldest son Hamza was killed in a separate Israeli strike in southern Gaza in January 2024.

Hamza was working as a reporter at the time. Mahmoud had also hoped one day to follow in his father’s footsteps and become a journalist.

Al-Dahdouh said he was disillusioned by the lack of media coverage the war was getting around the world.

“Why do they treat us with such indifference? Is it because of the color of our skin? Or the color of our eyes? Aren’t we all created equal after all?” he said.

The journalist, who was speaking from Qatar, where he was taken after being injured in a separate airstrike, has voiced strong criticism of Israel’s military campaign and accused it of engaging in a genocidal campaign.

He also highlighted the difficulty of reporting from within Gaza. Israel prevents foreign media from entering Gaza, leaving local journalists to cover the war and endure its impact.

“It wasn’t enough, it wasn’t as objective as we thought it should have been, the lack of adherence to norms and standards of journalism,” Al-Dahdouh said.

“That feeling sometimes was even more painful than being at the receiving end of missiles and bullets.”

The local journalists felt, “as though we are being left alone,” he said.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, nearly 200 journalists and media workers — almost all Palestinian —have been killed in the conflict. Other organizations have said the death toll could be as high as 270.

Rights groups and the international community have repeatedly accused Israel of deliberately targeting journalists to prevent news reports from getting out of Gaza. Some have said its actions could constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Israeli officials have justified the killing of reporters, including Al Jazeera correspondent Anas al-Sharif and five colleagues, by claiming they were Hamas operatives.

Al-Dahdouh said the Israeli military had accused him and his colleagues of involvement with militant activities, which he described as “false and misleading attempts to justify the killing of our colleagues” and to avoid accountability.

Without local journalists, “nobody would have known about the genocide and the tragedies that have been going on,” he said.

He warned that the world must not assume the horrors unfolding in Gaza are distant or irrelevant.

“If nobody does anything, those who perpetrate these crimes will encourage others elsewhere to do the same and one day the fire will reach you in your own homes and houses,” he said.

“By then, what can we do? It might be too late. We may not survive as a nation but what are you going to do?”


Eurovision Sport, Camb.ai to provide live subtitling for Paralympic Winter Games

Updated 36 sec ago
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Eurovision Sport, Camb.ai to provide live subtitling for Paralympic Winter Games

  • Partnership aims to increase accessibility for all audiences
  • Milano Cortina Games run from Friday to March 15

LONDON: Eurovision Sport, the European Broadcasting Union’s free-to-air streaming platform, will provide live and on-demand subtitling for coverage of the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games in partnership with AI language company Camb.ai

The service will run across all competition days, allowing viewers to stream all six Paralympic Winter Games sports on Eurovision Sport with real-time subtitles. The Games open on Friday and run through March 15.

Camb.ai will supply contextual speech-to-text transcription for both live and catch-up coverage, which the organizers said would support accessibility without altering the editorial integrity of broadcasts.

Eurovision Sport Managing Director Alan Fagan said the aim was to make the Games available to “the widest possible audience,” by scaling up digital accessibility across every event on the platform.

The initiative forms part of the EBU’s most extensive digital coverage of a Paralympic Winter Games to date and complements member broadcasters’ linear output.

It also reflects a wider industry push to make live sport easier to follow for viewers watching without sound, people with hearing impairments and audiences consuming content on demand.

Camb.ai’s Chief Technology Officer Akshat Prakash said the company was proud to deepen its partnership with Eurovision Sport, describing the platform as a leader in applying new technology to sports coverage.

The two organizations began working together in 2024, when they delivered what they described as Europe’s first AI-powered real-time translated sports commentary during European Athletics events.