Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil killed in Israeli strike
Khalil’s death comes ahead of a second round of Israel-Lebanon talks in Washington on extending the ceasefire.
PTI
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A second Israeli strike hit the house where Amal Khalil taken cover while reporting (Screengrab)
Beirut, Apr 23 (AP)
A Lebanese journalist was killed Wednesday in an Israeli airstrike on a house in southern Lebanon where she had taken cover while reporting on the Israel-Hezbollah war. Her body was only retrieved from the rubble hours later, rescue workers said.
The daily
Al-Akhbar newspaper says its reporter, Amal Khalil, was killed in the southern
village of al-Tiri.
Khalil had
been covering the conflict in Lebanon between Israel and the Lebanese Hezbollah
militant group that resumed in early March, in the shadow of the US-Israeli war
in Iran. She took cover in the house in al-Tiri after an earlier Israeli
airstrike hit near the car she was travelling in with another colleague.
The
Lebanese health ministry said the first strike killed two people. A second
Israeli strike then hit the house in al-Tiri where Khalil and her colleague
Zeinab Faraj had taken cover.
At first,
rescue workers were able to get to Faraj, who was seriously wounded, and
retrieve the bodies of two killed in the first airstrike. But they were fired
on by Israeli forces so they were forced to halt attempts to reach Khalil, the
ministry said.
Khalil
remained under the rubble for hours before the Lebanese army, civil defence, and
the Lebanese Red Cross were able to get to the scene hours later. Khalil's body
was retrieved shortly before midnight, at least six hours after the strike.
Israel's
military said individuals in the village had violated the ceasefire,
endangering its troops. Israel denied that it targets journalists or that it
prevented rescue teams from reaching the area. It said the incident was under
review.
"Killing
of journalists is a crime and a flagrant violation of international and
humanitarian law,” said Lebanon's Information Minister Paul Morcos.
Khalil's
death comes on the eve of the second round of direct talks between Israeli and
Lebanese officials in Washington on extending the ceasefire that went into
effect last Friday.
Khalil,
who was from southern Lebanon, had been covering the area since 2006 for
al-Akhbar. Her latest reporting was about Israeli demolitions of Lebanese homes
in villages where Israeli troops are now positioned inside Lebanon.
Her death
brings to nine the number of journalists killed in Lebanon so far this year. At
least 2,300 people have been killed in Israeli strikes and more than 1 million
displaced since the latest Israel-Hezbollah war erupted on 2 March.
Earlier on
Wednesday, Reporters Without Borders called for international pressure on the
Israeli army to allow Khalil's rescue. Committee to Protect Journalists
expressed its “outrage” at the apparent targeting of the two journalists and
warned that the obstruction of rescue efforts “may amount to a war crime.”
Lebanon's
President Joseph Aoun asked the Lebanese Red Cross to coordinate with the
Lebanese army and UN peacekeepers “to carry out the rescue operation" as
quickly as possible.
In late
March, an Israeli airstrike on southern Lebanon killed three journalists
covering the war. Hezbollah's al-Manar TV said its longtime correspondent Ali
Shoeib was killed. Israel's military said it had targeted Shoeib, accusing him
of being a Hezbollah intelligence operative, without providing evidence.
Also
killed in the same strike was reporter Fatima Ftouni, who worked for the
Beirut-based Al-Mayadeen TV, along with her brother Mohammed Ftouni, a video
journalist.
Days earlier, an Israeli airstrike on an apartment in central Beirut killed Mohammed Sherri, the head of political programs at Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV, along with his wife.
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