Israeli strike on Gaza hospital
5 journalists among 20 killed
Tuesday, 26 August 2025
GAZA, Aug 25 (BBC): At least 20 people, including five journalists working for the international media, are reported to have been killed in an Israeli strike on a hospital in the southern Gaza Strip.
A Reuters cameraman, an Associated Press (AP) journalist, and an Al Jazeera photographer were among them. It is not clear who the other two worked for.
Several people were killed in an initial strike, and others in a second which happened as rescuers attended the scene, the Hamas-run health ministry said.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) says an investigation is being carried out into its attack on the hospital. It added that it "does not target journalists as such", but did not give details about the strike.
The latest deaths brings the number of journalists killed in Gaza since the start of the war there in October 2023 to nearly 200.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), a leading body which promotes press freedom, the war in Gaza has been the deadliest conflict for journalists ever documented. It says more press members have been killed there in the past two years than were killed worldwide in the prior three years.
International journalists have been banned by Israel from entering the Gaza Strip independently since the start of the war.
Some journalists have been taken into Gaza by the IDF under controlled access, but international media outlets rely on local reporters for much of their coverage in Gaza.
The health ministry said people were killed when a missile hit the fourth floor, followed by a second missile on the same spot when rescuers arrived, AP reported.
In video from the scene, a doctor standing at an entrance to the hospital - the main one in southern Gaza - holds up bloodied clothes to show journalists following the first strike. Suddenly there is a blast, sending people running for cover as glass shatters. A man injured by the blast is seen trying to drag himself to safety.
In other footage, white and grey smoke can be seen billowing from an upper level of the hospital where damage is apparent. Outside, people are running and shouting amid chaos, as ambulance horns can be heard.
Reuters news agency said its cameraman, Husam al-Masri, was among those killed and Hatem Khaled injured. The agency said it was devastated and "urgently seeking more information".
AP said Mariam Dagga, a freelance journalist working for it, was also killed. The news agency said it was "shocked and saddened" by the 33-year-old's death. The others include Al Jazeera's Mohammad Salama, and photographer Moaz Abu Taha. US TV network NBC said Taha did not work for it, as had been initially reported.