Foreign media failed to enter Gaza, so journalists living there were tiled this for the world
Their cameras are still high in blue press vests and emotions worn out of excessive use, and the Palestinian journalists in Gaza are still in the work after the ceasefire be declared a week ago.
Due to the fact that foreign media were not released in the Gaza Strip, local journalists, who sometimes took the images of the latest moments of their families, and all this was to ensure that international media outlets can bring the world to Jangina. 2.2 million civilians in the enclave endured the destruction. After Israel launches a military campaign 15 months ago, about 90 percent of the population fell and many moved several times.
Since then, the Israeli military campaign has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the Ministry of Health, on October 7, 2023, the attack on the attack on Hamas led by Hamas. According to Israel’s data, more than 250 collateral.
Three Palestinian journalists CBC’s free video with Mohamed El Saife and the effects of war in their homes, he said, how to make a report on the war.
The turtles Abu Musabah

Press TV working with Talat Abu Musabah “I can’t believe me to get right from this genocide war,” he said.
“From the beginning of this war, Israeli forces target Palestinian journalists.”
In a press release At the beginning of this month, the International Federation of Journalists said the “at least 152 journalists” were killed in Gaza during the war. The murders were condemned in the release and demanded “emergency research” in connection with their deaths. Journalists’ Defense Committee says the death toll is 167 and notes that many other deaths are studying the news.
The day he spoke to the CBC Abu Musabah, he said, “he was amazed,” he said.
He started working with Iran news agency Press TV, which covers air attacks, dry attacks and deaths in the Gaza Strip. He said he wanted to inform the conflict to “raise the voice of the Palestinian people.” More than October 7, 2023, a journalist said that this work is always called.
Talat Abu Musabah says he was very happy with the news of the ceasefire, but he is still investigating the amazing civil losses.
“For me, journalism is one of the most important aspects of our daily lives as the Palestinian people,” he said. In terms of the fight, we have this ruthless battle with the occupying forces of Israel. ”
Looking at the days of war, he describes them as “extremely terrible”.
As families returned to the rafaha, it is waiting for many of the terrible work as to search for the remains of their relatives to be buried. Although the Gaza Ministry of Health estimates that about 47,000 civilians are killed in the war, the research published in Lancet on January 9 shows that the actual figure is more.
But “was a remarkable day to declare the ceasefire agreement,” Abu Musabah said. “We were very pleased with this ceasefire.”
Sami Abu Salem

A group of Palestinian journalists, a group of Palestinian journalists gathered near the European Hospital in Khan Yunis, has spread a viral video on social media to celebrate the moment of the ceasefire. They singed and cheered and shared the moment of survival and remembered their colleagues who could not be there to mention them.
WAFA writer Sami Abu Salem described the contradictory feelings in the post-war in Gaza.
He said in an interview, “We are lucky and agree, because we are Sagug.” “But at the same time, I am very sorry that we have lost more than 200 colleagues.”
The 53-year-old writer was cautiously optimistic, because the ceasefire is still “fragile” and can be broken at any moment.
The father also described his struggle in the last 15 months – even when the war illuminates the destruction and the influence of the people around him, he tried to find food, water and supplies for his family. . However, he says that the lack of failure to balance everything is often defeated during the conflict.
Sami Abu Salem says journalism has been a way of voting for the Palestinians during his war. Since he scattered his house, he is looking for a place to live with his family.
“As a journalist, a journalist, I felt that I could not be able to cope with his work. Or look at my children, to look for a place to stay, or to look for food and water,” he said. Or to lighten the news and take a picture. ”
Again, there was a hope of becoming a famous journalist and considered the delivery of war stories to the world.
It seems that he hears tired, and he heards from the mouth of sleep.
“I have been a journalist.” “But I’m not famous.”
Now he will focus on finding a house for his family, something that can not provide the collapse and the bombing campaigns along the strip.
“I don’t know where to go, where I will live.”
He is hand-master

Diaa Al-Uzaz ABC, who worked on a media tent, wrote an article on the laptop trying to finish his last story. His Blue and Old Jacket was hanged from the nearby coat. Blank coffee cups littered his table, fuel for a day job – there are many stories to be talked about in the post-war Gaza.
Before the war, 29-year-old al-Mastery civil society completed his master’s degree in Save The Children organization worked as a field coordinator. As the war began, his education was incomplete, and he said he was sent to a journalist, which was a job hoping for his whole life. Save The Children’s work ended and he could not continue his education when he tried to survive the war, so he decided to make a life dream.
“We have a message that we have to deliver all the people in the world because we are located in the conflict zone,” he said. “Journalism area is the eye of the truth.”
Diaa Al-Mastaz says that the International Journalists Federation of International Journalists said that at least 152 journalists were killed this month this month.
However, he said that he was a good journalist of his interest in this profession like a young boy.
“Journalists must be a person, feel like all people, and have a lighting capacity to deliver the message in all languages,” he said.