The BBC are at it again. Apparently not perturbed by a damning report that last year found the British public broadcaster had breached its own editorial rules, in its Gaza ‘reporting’, the BBC is yet again lying by omission and trying to drum up sympathy for anti-Semitic terror supporters.
An Israeli air strike on the emergency department of Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza has killed a well-known Palestinian photojournalist, medical sources and eyewitnesses say.
Hassan Aslih, who was being treated for injuries from a previous Israeli strike, was targeted in what witnesses described as a drone attack on the hospital’s surgical wing.
Well, he’s ‘well-known’, that’s for sure. Though, ‘notorious’ might be a better description.
Because what the BBC tries to bury and dismiss is this:
Aslih had published dozens of photos and videos documenting the 7 October Hamas assault from inside Israeli territory.
Well, he certainly has the darndest luck of just happening to be on the spot, time and again. No doubt it was the merest coincidence that he just happened to be ‘recovering’ in a hospital sheltering the Hamas commander. A hospital that just happens to have a massive Hamas bunker beneath it.
Just as Aslih, also known as Hassan Abdel Fattah Mohammed Eslaih, just happened to be right on the spot to document Hamas’ surprise attack and massacre on October 7.
Eslaih, who was previously employed by both CNN and the Associated Press (AP) and owned a media company, took part in the October 7 massacre, infiltrating southern Israel and sharing footage from the massacre to social media, the IDF noted.
The same as he just happened to pose for smoochie selfies with October 7 mastermind, Yahya Sinwar.
I mean, just how lucky can a ‘photojournalist’ get?
The parents of five victims of the Nova music festival attack filed a civil suit for damages against AP and Reuters for employing and utilizing photojournalists involved with terrorist organizations, naming Eslaih in the suit […]
The lawsuit alleged that the journalists’ filing photographs in real time during the Hamas attacks made them a component of the attacks and, therefore, they were not conducting legitimate journalistic work.
Oh, come on. I mean, anyone could just happen to be hanging around, ready to livestream, at the very instant that an anti-Semitic terror group launches a secretly planned attack to genocide Jews. Could happen to anyone.