A number of survivors of the Hamas October 7 attack on Israel and
families of victims of the unprecedented terror assault have filed a
lawsuit against the Associated Press, accusing the news agency of being
complicit in the Palestinian terror group’s killing spree over four
months ago by working with freelance photojournalists they believe were
embedded with the thousands of terrorists who overran southern
communities.
The plaintiffs are dual Israeli-US nationals and Americans who
attended the Supernova music festival at Kibbutz Re’im on October 7
where terrorists massacred some 360 in and around the area, as well of
families of those killed.
They filed a federal complaint on Wednesday night in the Southern
District of Florida suing the AP for damages under the Antiterrorism
Act. They are being represented by the National Jewish Advocacy Center
which accuses the AP of “materially supporting terrorism” by purchasing
images during and after the October 7 attack, when thousands of
terrorists killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 253 into
Gaza.
The lawsuit names four freelance photographers whose work was bought
and published by the AP and other outlets, claiming they are “known
Hamas associates who were gleefully embedded with the Hamas terrorists
during the October 7th attacks.”
The four captured some of the earliest images, widely disseminated, of the shock attack as it was unfolding.
In early November, pro-Israel watchdog group Honest Reporting published a report
showing that photographers — including the four mentioned in the suit —
used by the AP, Reuters, The New York Times, and CNN provided images
taken as the attack was ongoing from the border area and from inside
Israel — intimating they may have had advance knowledge of the assault.
Palestinians from the Gaza Strip enter
Kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7, 2023, amid a massive assault by the Hamas
terror group. (AP Photo/Hassan Eslaiah)
The organization listed four photojournalists whose names appear in
Associated Press pictures from the Israel-Gaza border area on October 7:
Hassan Eslaiah, Yousef Masoud, Ali Mahmud, and Hatem Ali.
The complaint focuses mainly on Eslaiah, who according to the Honest
Reporting report, crossed the border into Israel and took pictures of a
burning IDF tank. He also photographed attackers entering Kibbutz Kfar
Aza, where dozens of civilians were massacred. The report said that in
now-removed tweets posted to his X feed, Eslaiah was seen in front of
the tank but not wearing a press vest that would identify him as a
member of the media.
Mahmud and Ali both took pictures of people being abducted from Israel into Gaza, the report said.
Palestinian terrorists kidnap an Israeli
civilian, center, later identified as 85-year-old Yaffa Adar, into the
Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023 (AP/ Hatem Ali)
The report also raised questions about the relationship between some
of the photographers and the Hamas terror group that rules Gaza.
Eslaiah, appeared in a photo from 2020 being kissed by Hamas’s Gaza
leader Yahya Sinwar. Eslaiah posted the photo on January 9, 2020.
AP, Reuters and The New York Times all denied having any prior
knowledge of the October 7 attack. AP and CNN have also since severed
tied with Eslaiah, who denied any prior knowledge.
After the denials, Honest Reporting said
it was simply “raising questions” by publicly wondering whether
Palestinian photojournalists who documented the assault and sent some of
the first images had been tipped off in advance.
Gazans celebrate by a destroyed Israeli
tank at the broken Israel-Gaza border fence, east of Khan Younis,
October 7, 2023. (AP/Yousef Masoud)
The lawsuit filed this week charges that “AP willfully chose to turn a
blind eye to these facts, and instead profited from its terrorist
photographer’s participation in the massacre through its publication of
the ‘exclusive’ images, for which it certainly paid a premium,
effectively funding a terrorist organization.”
“There is no doubt that AP’s photographers participated in the
October 7th massacre, and that AP knew, or at the very least should have
known, through simple due diligence, that the people they were paying
were longstanding Hamas affiliates and full participants in the
terrorist attack that they were also documenting,” the complaint
alleged.
A house is on fire in Kibbutz Nir Oz during
an attack by Palestinian terrorists from the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7,
2023. (AP/Hassan Eslaiah)
AP’s vice president of corporate communications Lauren Easton said
in a statement Thursday that “The Associated Press has the deepest
sympathy for those affected by the horrific Oct. 7 attacks in Israel”
and that the “lawsuit filed Wednesday against AP for its reporting on
the attacks is baseless.”
“AP had no advance knowledge of the Oct. 7 attacks, nor have we seen
any evidence – including in the lawsuit – that the freelance journalists
who contributed to our coverage did. Allegations like this are reckless
and create even more potential danger for journalists in the region,”
she said.
In November, Easton said that “the first pictures AP received from
any freelancer show they were taken more than an hour after the attacks
began” at around 6:30 a.m. local time on October 7.
“No AP staff were at the border at the time of the attacks, nor did any AP staffer cross the border at any time.
“We are no longer working with Hassan Eslaiah, who had been an
occasional freelancer for AP and other international news organizations
in Gaza,” she said at the time.
National Jewish Advocacy Center director Mark Goldfeder told
the New York Post that “media organizations do not have any special
right to act with impunity and pretend that they don’t know whom they
are paying.”
“And as other cases have made clear, it does not matter that the
people AP was paying, with whom they had longstanding relationships,
were freelancers and not employees; the issue is that AP was furnishing
material support to a foreign terrorist organization, not in what
capacity the terrorists were cashing the checks.”
1 comment:
I gotta admit I think that the case for the plaintiffs is kind of thin here.
Post a Comment