DOHA, Qatar: Qatar-based Al Jazeera condemned the Sunday killing of one of its journalists in an Israeli strike on Gaza, calling the death a âtargeted killingâ in a statement.
He is the fifth Al Jazeera journalist to be killed since the war in Gaza began more than 14 months ago.
âAl Jazeera Media Network condemns in the strongest terms the killing of its cameraman,
Ahmad Baker Al-Louh. (Photo/Facebook)
, 39, by the Israeli occupation forces,â the channel said.
âHe was brutally killed in an air strike that targeted a Civil Defense post in the market area of Al-Nuseirat Camp, central Gaza Strip,â it added.
The Israeli military confirmed in a statement it had killed Louh, saying he was a member of Islamic Jihad and âpreviously served as a platoon commanderâ for the militant group.
Israelâs military has repeatedly accused journalists from the Al Jazeera of links to Hamas or its ally Islamic Jihad. Al Jazeera has fiercely denied these accusations and said Israel systematically targets its employees in the Gaza Strip.
The military said it struck a âcommand and control center embedded in the offices of the civil defense organization in Nuseirat,â targeting âHamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists.â It said the center was used to target Israeli troops.
Gazaâs civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal confirmed Louh had been killed in the strike on the Nuseirat camp that also claimed the lives of three members of Bassalâs rescue agency.
Bassal told AFP a warplane had âtargeted the Civil Defense site in Nuseirat camp.â
In a statement, the Palestinian militant group Hamas called Louhâs killing an âassassinationâ and a âwar crime,â describing it as âpart of a systematic targeting of journalists in Gaza, aimed at intimidating them and deterring them.â
Al Jazeera said Louhâs killing came âjust days after the targeting of his houseâ by Israeli forces who âutterly destroyedâ it.
âAl Jazeera unequivocally condemns the ongoing crimes committed by Israeli occupation forces against journalists and media professionals in Gaza,â the channel said.
The network added it would âpursue all legal measures to prosecute the perpetratorsâ of these crimes.
Since the start of the war in the Palestinian territory on October 7 last year, Al Jazeera has aired continuous on-the-ground reporting on the effects of Israelâs campaign.
The global channel, since before the war, has been the focus of long-running feud with the Israeli government which has repeatedly accused journalists from Al Jazeera of links to Hamas or its ally Islamic Jihad.
In September, Israeli forces raided Al Jazeeraâs office in the West Bank, with Israelâs military saying the Ramallah bureau had been âused to incite terrorâ and âsupport terrorist activities.â
Al Jazeera called the Israeli raid âa criminal actâ and an attack on press freedom.
In April, the Israeli parliament passed a law allowing the banning of foreign media broadcasts deemed harmful to state security.
Based on this law, Israelâs government on May 5 approved the decision to ban Al Jazeera from broadcasting from Israel and close its offices.
In September, armed and masked Israeli forced raided Al Jazeeraâs West bank office and issued an initial closure order.
Israelâs military said the Ramallah office was âused to incite terrorâ and âsupport terrorist activities,â and Al Jazeeraâs broadcasts endangered Israelâs security.
The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists earlier on Sunday said the Israel-Hamas war âhas taken an unprecedented toll on Gazan journalists.â
The watchdog said CPJâs preliminary investigations showed at least 137 journalists and media workers have been killed in Gaza, the West Bank, Israel and Lebanon since October 7, 2023.
Ìę
Ìę