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NextImg:Top news agencies urge Israel to let foreign press into Gaza, say reporters starving

PARIS — International news agencies Agence France-Presse, Associated Press, and Reuters, as well as the BBC, on Thursday called on Israel to allow journalists in and out of Gaza.

“We are desperately concerned for our journalists in Gaza, who are increasingly unable to feed themselves and their families,” the media groups said in a joint statement.

They added that “journalists endure many deprivations and hardships in war zones. We are deeply alarmed that the threat of starvation is now one of them.”

“We once again urge the Israeli authorities to allow journalists in and out of Gaza. It is essential that adequate food supplies reach the people there,” they concluded.

With Gaza sealed off from foreign journalists, many media groups around the world depend on photo, video, and text coverage of the conflict provided by Palestinian reporters to international news agencies such as AFP.

International criticism is growing over the plight of the more than two million Palestinian civilians in Gaza, where more than 100 aid and rights groups have warned that “mass starvation” is spreading.

Palestinians walking after receiving humanitarian aid from an aid distribution point in Rafah, the southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2025. (AFP)

Since the war started with the October 7, 2023, massacre in Israel by the Hamas terror group, a small number of journalists have been able to enter Gaza only with the Israeli army and under strict military censorship rules. The government has rebuffed requests to allow media to enter freely, saying the situation in Gaza is too dangerous to allow access without military escort.

Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders said in early July that more than 200 journalists had been killed in Gaza since the war began.

AFP news agency has published accounts of life inside Gaza from its reporters this week. It has said it is concerned about “the appalling situation” they face due to a daily struggle to find food.

“We have no energy left due to hunger and lack of food,” said Omar al-Qattaa, a 35-year-old AFP photographer shortlisted for a Pulitzer Prize earlier this year.

“Obtaining food in Gaza is extremely difficult. Even when it is available, prices are multiplied by 100,” video journalist Youssef Hassouna said.

Israel says humanitarian aid is being allowed in and accuses Hamas, the terror group that rules the Strip, of exploiting civilian suffering, including by stealing food handouts to sell at inflated prices or shooting at those awaiting aid.

Israel has also repeatedly dismissed reports of widespread starvation in the Strip, saying it is permitting humanitarian aid, including food, to enter, and accusing the UN and other aid agencies of failing to distribute it.

The World Health Organization’s chief warned on Wednesday of widespread starvation in Gaza, saying food deliveries into the territory were “far below what is needed for the survival of the population.”

Palestinians make their way through the al-Mawasi area, near Rafah, on July 24, 2025, after receiving humanitarian aid from an aid distribution point in the southern Gaza Strip. (AFP)

Witnesses and Gaza’s Hamas-run civil defense agency have repeatedly accused Israeli forces of firing on aid seekers. The UN said the military had killed more than 1,000 Palestinians trying to get food since late May, mostly near sites run by the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

AFP succeeded in evacuating eight staff members and their families from Gaza between January and April 2024, after months of effort.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, a media freedom group, said in a statement on Wednesday that Israel was “starving Gazan journalists into silence.”

“They are not just reporters, they are frontline witnesses, abandoned as international media were pulled out and denied entry,” CPJ regional director Sara Qudah was quoted as saying.

Many Palestinian journalists have spoken out or posted about their exhaustion, with Sally Thabet, a correspondent for Al-Kofiya satellite channel, fainting after a live broadcast this week, the CPJ said.

Doha-based Al Jazeera, the most influential Arabic media group, also called for global action to protect Gaza’s journalists on Tuesday.

The channel, which was banned in Israel last year after the Tel Aviv District Court found “a clear and proven causal relationship between the the content of Al Jazeera broadcasts and terror attacks carried out in Israel,” and stated that its journalists were assisting terror groups, has had five of its reporters killed since the start of the conflict in what it says is a deliberate targeting campaign by Israel.

Israel has presented evidence that several Palestinian journalists working in Gaza — some for Al Jazeera — were active members of terror groups like Hamas.

The Al Jazeera television network offices in Ramallah in the West Bank on May 5, 2024. (Zain JAAFAR/ AFP/ File)

“We know that probably most journalists inside Gaza are operating under the auspices of Hamas, and until Hamas is destroyed, they will not be allowed to report freely,” Israeli government spokesman David Mercer told a press conference last December.

The war in Gaza began with the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, invasion and massacres, during which terrorists killed some 1,200 people and kidnapped 251 hostages to Gaza.

In the ensuing war, some 58,000 people in Gaza have been killed, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry. Hamas casualty figures cannot be verified and do not differentiate between combatants and civilians.