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Israeli Military Shuts Al Jazeera Office

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On Sunday, Israeli forces entered Al Jazeera’s Ramallah office, mandating a 45-day closure of their West Bank operations. This event, broadcast live on Al Jazeera, saw soldiers delivering the closure order to Walid al-Omari, the bureau chief. The military provided no specific justification for this action.

Al Jazeera strongly criticized the closure, viewing it as an attempt to suppress information. Omari suggested this was part of a broader strategy targeting the network’s journalists, noting that four staff members have died in Gaza since October 7.

The shutdown is based on legislation passed in April, allowing bans on foreign media deemed a threat to state security. Israel’s parliament had previously approved closing Al Jazeera’s offices in May, citing alleged ties to militant groups.

Palestinian authorities in both Ramallah and Gaza condemned the raid as an infringement on press freedom. They accused Israel of trying to limit coverage of its actions in occupied territories.

This incident occurs against the backdrop of escalating tensions between Israel and Al Jazeera. The network’s Gaza offices were bombed earlier in the conflict, further straining relations. Al Jazeera maintains it has no connections to militant groups and sees Israel’s actions as an attack on journalism.

The closure coincides with the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict, which began on October 7 with a Hamas attack killing 1,205 in Israel. Since then, Israeli airstrikes have resulted in over 41,000 deaths in Gaza, according to Hamas-run health ministry figures deemed credible by the UN.

Despite the closure, Al Jazeera has pledged to continue covering the conflict. The raid has sparked international concern, with reactions expected from various global entities and media watchdogs.

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This development raises questions about press freedom in conflict zones and Israel’s approach to international media coverage.

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