WAR ON GAZA
2 min read
Palestinian journalists march with 'coffins' to mark two years of Israel's Gaza genocide
Journalists handed over a letter to the UN representative in Ramallah asking for Secretary-General Guterres to take measures to protect journalists in Gaza.
Palestinian journalists march with 'coffins' to mark two years of Israel's Gaza genocide
Dozens of journalists marched towards the city's UN headquarters carrying coffins.
October 8, 2025

Palestinian journalists rallied against Israeli attacks on Gaza media workers on Wednesday in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.

Dozens of journalists marched towards the city's UN headquarters carrying coffins bearing the names and photos of journalists killed by Israel in Gaza since October 7, 2023.

"All of them, every single one of them, has his own story," said Nasser Abu Baker, head of the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, which organised the event.

Among the names was Anas al Sharif, a prominent correspondent for Al Jazeera in Gaza, who was killed in August in an Israeli air strike outside al Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

The UN and rights groups have strongly condemned Sharif's killing.

After the speeches at the event, Abu Baker said he would hand over a letter to the UN representative in Ramallah asking for Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to take measures "to protect our journalists in Gaza because they are daily under fire, under the bombing strike, in a very dangerous situation".

Since October 2023, 278 journalists have been killed in Gaza, the highest toll in modern history.

Several journalists have been subjected to enforced disappearance, and Israel prevents foreign journalists from entering Gaza.

Islam Abu Ara, director of digital media for the Palestinian Authority-affiliated newspaper Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, said that the situation had also deteriorated for journalists in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967.

"There are also restrictions on journalists in the occupied West Bank, assaults by illegal Israeli settlers and pressure from the Israeli army," Abu Ara told AFP.

He said that he personally faced restrictions, particularly when moving between cities.

"When (Israeli soldiers at checkpoints) find out I'm a journalist, they search my car much more thoroughly than they do for ordinary people," he said, noting his phone was also checked.

SOURCE:AFP
Explore
Over 150 Gaza citizens enter South Africa after airport ordeal amid trafficking alerts
Indonesia prepares 20,000 personnel for possible Gaza deployment
Witkoff plans to meet with chief Hamas negotiator — report
US, Türkiye, Pakistan and several Arab states urge 'swift adoption' of UN Gaza resolution
Israeli forces carry out predawn raids across occupied West Bank, detain nine civilians
Spain condemns 'unprecedented' surge in illegal settler violence in occupied West Bank
Russia proposes its own UN resolution on Gaza that omits Trump's 'Board of Peace'
US proposal for ISF in Gaza meets pushback from Russia, China and several Arab countries
900,000+ Palestinians uprooted in Israel's genocide in Gaza at risk as 'dangerous' storm approaches
Hamas returns remains of another Israeli captive through ICRC in Gaza
Illegal Israeli settlers torch a mosque in occupied West Bank, scrawl hateful messages
'Good progress' made on Gaza 'stabilisation force' plan, US top diplomat says
UN says Gaza ceasefire 'fragile' and 'repeatedly violated', calls for it to be respected
Rubio warns illegal settlers' violence in occupied West Bank could jeopardise Gaza peace efforts
Israel strikes towns in southern Lebanon in latest violation of ceasefire
Israel quizzed at UN over 'systematic torture' of Palestinians
German club loses appeal over El Ghazi contract termination for pro-Palestine support
Illegal Israeli settlers attack Palestinians, injuring four in occupied West Bank
Freed Palestinian woman recounts horrors of sexual torture by Israeli soldiers
Hind Rajab Foundation files complaint seeking arrest of Israeli soldier for war crimes in Gaza