Palestinian television channel raided and closed by Israeli occupation, three journalists arrested
by samidoun
In
an indication of an escalating attack on Palestinian journalists and
media outlets, Israeli occupation forces invaded, attacked and shut down
the Palestinian satellite channel Palestine Today (Filasteen al-Yom) as well as its broadcasting company, Trans Media, and arrested three Palestinian journalists.
In the early dawn hours of Friday, 11 March, Israeli soldiers stormed the headquarters
of Palestine Today in El-Bireh, seizing equipment and computers and
arresting two journalists present in the office, Mohammed Amr of
al-Khalil and Shabib Shabib of Nablus, both of whom were taken to Beit
El settlement. The home of Farouq Elayyat in Bir Zeit, the director of
the channel in the West Bank, was simultaneously invaded by Israeli
occupation forces, who arrested him and seized his belongings. They were
among 33 Palestinians seized overnight by Israeli occupation forces.
Occupation
forces also attacked Trans Media, which provides broadcasting services
to Palestine Today, seizing their electronic and broadcasting equipment.
The
Palestinian journalists syndicate denounced the attack on Palestine
Today and Trans Media and the arrest of the three journalists, saying
that these attacks are part of ongoing Israeli crimes against
journalists and the Palestinian media, reflecting the bankrupt approach
of the Israeli settler government. It urged Arab and international
journalists' unions to condemn these actions and pressure Israel.
The attack on Palestine Today came only one day after
the Israeli cabinet approved Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plan
to shut down Palestinian media outlets under the pretext of
"incitement." In response to this action, the Palestinian journalists
syndicate had said that the "war against journalists came in response to
the demands of the Israeli settlers and the extremist right-wingers,
who had been calling for the closure of Palestinian radio and TV
stations. The attempt by the Israeli government to label the Palestinian
press with incitement and as fuelling hate will not succeed because the
Israeli government is the party which practices incitement and hate
through the Israeli mass media."
This comes after the 94-day hunger strike of Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq,
in protest of his administrative detention - imprisonment without
charge or trial. Al-Qeeq's case highlighted the struggle of imprisoned
Palestinian journalists; there are at least 18 journalists in Israeli
jails.
Israeli
occupation forces accused Palestine Today of being affiliated to the
Palestinian political party, Islamic Jihad, and therefore being a
"prohibited organization"; Israeli right-wing media also expressed
frustration that Palestine Today continued to broadcast, because it is
distributed on Arabic-language satellites and has additional offices and
broadcasting centers in Gaza, as well as in Lebanon, where hundreds of
thousands of displaced Palestinian refugees continue to live in refugee
camps.
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