Dead Journalists, Unverified Claims: Israel Kills Three Media Workers in Lebanon Airstrike

Dead Journalists, Unverified Claims: Israel Kills Three Media Workers in Lebanon Airstrike

BEIRUT — The missiles came without warning.

In a single strike on the southern Lebanese district of Jezzine on Saturday, three journalists were dead. A 30-year veteran of war reporting. A young female correspondent who had just signed off from a live broadcast. Her brother, camera still in his hands.

Gone. All three. In an instant.

And within hours, Israel had an explanation ready — one that raised more questions than it answered.

The Strike

The facts, as far as they can be established, are these:

An Israeli airstrike hit the Jezzine district of southern Lebanon on Saturday. Among those killed were Ali Shoeib, a correspondent for Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV with nearly three decades of experience covering the south; Fatima Ftouni, a reporter for pan-Arab Al-Mayadeen TV who had just completed a live broadcast from the area; and her brother Mohammed, a video journalist working alongside her.

Three media workers. One strike. No survivors.

The Accusation

Israel's military moved quickly to justify the killing of Shoeib — and only Shoeib. In a statement, the Israeli army accused him of being a Hezbollah intelligence operative, claiming he had been "systematically exposing the locations of Israeli soldiers" and maintaining contact with Hezbollah militants.

Evidence? There was none. At least none that was made public.

As for Fatima and Mohammed Ftouni — the sister and brother who died in the very same strike — the Israeli military had nothing to say. Their names did not appear in the statement. Their deaths went unacknowledged. They were, in the eyes of the Israeli army's official account, as if they had never existed.

The Pattern

This is not the first time Israel has labeled a journalist it killed as a militant.

Throughout its devastating war against Hamas in Gaza, the Israeli military has repeatedly accused Palestinian journalists targeted in airstrikes of being Hamas operatives. The allegations have become so routine, so predictable, that press freedom organizations around the world have begun treating them as a template — a ready-made justification deployed after the fact, immune to scrutiny because the accused can no longer speak for themselves.

Saturday's strike fits that template with uncomfortable precision.

Al-Manar TV pushed back firmly, describing Shoeib as a journalist of integrity, "distinguished by his professional and credible reporting of events." The station stopped short of directly addressing Israel's specific allegations — but its message was clear.

The Broader Assault on Lebanese Media

To understand Saturday's killings, you have to zoom out.

Since the latest Israel-Hezbollah war erupted on March 2, Israel's air force has not limited itself to military targets. It has struck Al-Manar TV's headquarters. It has bombed Hezbollah's Al-Nour radio station. And just days before Saturday's strike, an Israeli airstrike on a central Beirut apartment building killed Mohammed Sherri — the head of political programs at Al-Manar TV — along with his wife.

The message being sent, critics argue, is unmistakable: if you report from the other side, you are a target.

With Saturday's deaths, five journalists and media workers have now been killed in Lebanon in less than a month of conflict. Five people who went to work with a camera, a microphone, or a notepad — and did not come home.

The Response

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called the strike exactly what many believe it to be — "a flagrant crime that violates all laws and agreements that protect journalists." His condemnation was swift, sharp, and unambiguous.

Israel has not responded to the criticism.

The Questions That Demand Answers

Here is what we know: Three journalists are dead. Israel killed them. Israel has provided no verifiable evidence to support its characterization of the strike as a legitimate military operation. Two of the three victims were not even mentioned in Israel's official statement.

Here is what we do not know: What intelligence, if any, underpinned Israel's decision to fire. Why Fatima and Mohammed Ftouni — journalists with no alleged militant connections — were in the strike zone. And whether anyone, anywhere, will be held accountable.

In wars across history, journalists have always paid a price for bearing witness. But when the killing of reporters becomes systematic, when the justifications become formulaic, and when entire media organizations are reduced to rubble — the free press itself becomes a casualty of war.

Fatima Ftouni was on air minutes before she died.

She was telling the world what was happening.

Now she is the story.

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