Jadaliyya has obtained access to leaked internal emails from the BBC, the British Broadcasting Corporation, revealing the depth of staff grievances at its coverage of the genocide in Palestine, and accusing the BBC of complicity. In an email dated 1 May 2024, Beirut-based BBC correspondent Rami Ruhayem wrote to the Director General of the BBC, Tim Davie, as well as several departments of BBC News staff, detailing the BBC’s editorial failings, which he considered ‘evidence of a collapse in the application of basic standards and norms of journalism that seems aligned with Israel’s propaganda strategy.’ Ruhayem indicated that BBC management had failed to respond to ‘a mass of evidence-based critique of coverage’ from members of staff. In conclusion, he wrote, ‘instead of putting together mechanisms for a thorough examination of output, and for inclusive, respectful, and professional discussions guided by [BBC] standards and values, it appears management has opted to oversee a continuation of the editorial direction the BBC has taken since October.’
This email was leaked to the right-wing UK press, appearing quoted one day later, on 2 May, in the broadsheets The Times (‘BBC correspondent questions ‘facts’ of October 7 attacks on Israel’) and The Telegraph (‘BBC may be ‘complicit in Israeli war propaganda’ claims Beirut correspondent’), as well as tabloid The Daily Mail (‘BBC correspondent says the broadcaster has a pro-Israel bias and should be questioning the ‘facts’ of October 7 – sparking fury among Jewish colleagues’).
Jadaliyya has obtained this email, as well as its attachments, which Ruhayem had written earlier, and which are shared here in full. In the first attachment (below), Ruhayem examines interviews with Israeli guests on the BBC News Channel between 10 and 25 October 2023, analysing this coverage in light of what he calls ‘Israel’s war on context’.
In the second attachment (to follow on Jadaliyya), Ruhayem examines BBC content relating to the events of October 7. He writes, ‘This paper is not about what happened on that day and the days that followed; rather, it is an inquiry into whether – and to what extent – the BBC applied, misapplied or simply cast aside journalistic standards in treating various claims about what happened on that day.’ Again he concludes: ‘I’ve found a sustained collapse in some of the most basic standards and values, one which seems to complement Israel’s propaganda purposes and strategy.’
The May email follows earlier communication by Ruhayem in October 2023, also addressed to Tim Davie and BBC staff. That email was subsequently quoted by the right-wing UK press, in the broadsheet The Times, and the Zionist publication The Jewish Chronicle. Jadaliyya published that email in full in ‘Turmoil at the BBC: Gravest Possible Concerns at its Gaza Coverage’.
Email: ‘Follow-up on Gaza Coverage’, 1 May
Sent to Director General of the BBC, Tim Davie and forwarded to BBC News staff
Dear Tim,
I’m writing to follow up on the message I sent to you in October in which I outlined what I believed were editorial failings of the kind that could raise the question of BBC complicity in Israeli war propaganda. During the time that has passed, I’ve managed to examine more thoroughly the extent of these failings, and whether management is serious about addressing them.
On the first point, I’ve seen evidence of bias in favour of Israel as well as evidence of a collapse in the application of basic standards and norms of journalism that seems aligned with Israel’s propaganda strategy. Such evidence has been pouring in for months at a dizzying pace. I’ve examined some of it, including in the two papers attached, which I sent to management’s feedback email in February. Other colleagues have documented other problems and presented them in different formats. We can only begin to determine the extent of the editorial failings when a well-resourced and transparent effort is undertaken to study BBC content during the past few months, and to understand the various mechanisms and levels of decision-making that have led to this.
This brings me to the second point. Management has recognized that many of us have deep misgivings about coverage, and that these should be heard. That seems to be the implicit logic behind the “Listening Sessions” and the feedback emails. But irrespective of what the intention(s) behind this process may have been, it has amounted to little more than a short-lived venting exercise. I have participated keenly in every avenue proposed by management that I managed to involve myself in, and more. Silence has been a common response to a mass of evidence-based critique of coverage. Nothing I sent to ‘feedback emails’ has received a response, except once to say that maybe someone will respond, maybe not. Others have had similar experiences.
The exceptions to such silence have usually been worse. In one email chain, a senior figure did not answer a simple question: do BBC presenters not have a duty to interject when serious, unverified claims are made on air? Another, when asked about the reasoning behind editorial decisions, saw fit to inform a group of staff that ‘editors edit’, seemingly in the belief that this should be enough to brush off everything we’d said. Remarkably, senior managers would occasionally offer a link or two as counterexamples to content that is editorially flawed, without addressing the latter. The implicit logic would appear to be that a collapse in standards is ok if there are exceptions. Faced with specific examples, senior managers might say it’s inappropriate to comment on individual stories. Faced with analysis that goes back in time to examine content, they might ask for ‘specific’ examples. One of them once referred a group of us back to the unresponsive ‘News board’ feedback email. Another told me they wouldn’t address issues that had already been raised to the News board.
In one reply by a senior manager to a group of staff, there was a strong suggestion that all the examples provided – including those outlined in the two papers attached – are the result of ‘decisions taken by editors.’ If that is indeed the case – would the editors be able to confirm that they gave instructions to drop requirements for applying scrutiny regarding the most serious, unverified claims that were being repeated by propagandists for Israel? Would they be able to explain why, and offer a defence of such decisions based on BBC values and standards? If that is not the case, would the editors be able to explain why - upon observing these standards being repeatedly cast aside - they did not intervene? In any case, would upper management clarify what it thinks its own duties are in such a situation?
The latest trend is to ask for ‘recent’ examples. This is usually in response to questions about the first weeks/months of coverage, during which Israeli claims about the events of October 7 were given an open, uncritical platform by the BBC. This ignores the fact that - in many cases - examples of this kind of thing were flagged as they were happening but not addressed at the time, or at any time. It also ignores the lasting harm such content is likely to have contributed to causing. In any case, many of us have offered – and continue to offer - feedback that covers all these categories; individual examples, systemic issues, recent examples, not-so-recent examples, without receiving a meaningful response in any instance, at any time, whatever the channel we use, and usually without receiving any response at all. In conclusion, instead of putting together mechanisms for a thorough examination of output, and for inclusive, respectful, and professional discussions guided by our standards and values, it appears management has opted to oversee a continuation of the editorial direction the BBC has taken since October.
The problems are evident, unmistakable, and ongoing. Acknowledging them would be a first step to fixing them and ensuring they never happen again. Alternatively, if you choose to endorse the coverage, would you kindly defend it by responding – thoroughly and directly - to the feedback that’s been sitting in management’s own feedback inboxes for months - or tell us who in the organisation can do that?
Respectfully awaiting your response,
Rami
Attachment 1: Follow-up on Listening Session, 8 February 2024
There is a growing body of evidence indicating that the BBC may have been withholding vital information from the public, contributing to incitement against Palestinians, and spreading and reinforcing Israeli war propaganda. Many of us have spoken out about this, urging immediate and meaningful change in line with the BBC’s editorial standards and values.
Management has responded with mixed signals. On one hand, we’ve been thanked for voicing our concerns, urged to keep doing so, and assured they’d be taken seriously. This suggests a recognition of the obvious - that it is our most pressing duty to address the problem in the public interest. But management has also behaved in ways that are not consistent with this recognition, including by ignoring a lot of detailed, specific criticism. Four months on, there still appears to be little meaningful effort to examine our coverage with urgency and transparency in pursuit of evidence-based conclusions.
I’ve taken a look at some of our output during what I believe is a foundational period of coverage, one that is certain to have had a potent and enduring impact on peoples’ attitudes and beliefs. Specifically, I’ve looked into interviews with Israeli guests – mostly officials and propagandists - on the BBC News Channel, between the 10th and 25th of October 2023. I believe what I’ve seen indicates a collapse in editorial standards and values in that crucial period - one which complements, reinforces, and otherwise serves Israel’s messaging. BBC output appears to have aided two pillars of Israeli propaganda: the obliteration of vital context, and incitement against Palestinians. These are tightly intertwined, but it is useful to look at each in some detail. Here, I examine context.
I will begin with a few words about Israel’s war on context, before identifying some of the relevant context that should have been taken into account and used to challenge Israeli officials. I will then detail some of my observations of BBC interviews, present my conclusions, and end with a few disclaimers.
Israel’s War on Context
For about four months now, people all over the world have been exposed – mostly via social media - to a ceaseless flow of news and images of unspeakable horror coming out of the Gaza Strip. Israel seeks to influence how that information is processed by hundreds of millions of minds around the world. A key aim is to prevent it from triggering effective action in opposition to its attack on Gaza, especially in Western countries whose support is vital for Israel.
A pillar of Israel’s propaganda strategy has been to pin the world’s focus exclusively to the October 7 attacks; nothing that Israel did before has any relevance, and everything that has happened since - and continues to happen - is to be understood and interpreted through the lens of these events. It was therefore in Israel’s interest to excise from public debate and awareness the reality of what it was doing prior to the attacks.
To that end, Israel effectively declared a war on context. This was made dramatically explicit in the Israeli reaction to a statement by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, who said on the 24 October that the Hamas attack ‘did not happen in a vacuum’. Israel swiftly retaliated by calling for his resignation and denying a visa to the UN Undersecretary General for Humanitarian Affairs. ‘It’s time to teach them a lesson’, said Israel’s UN Ambassador.
Providing context is a crucial part of journalism, more so amid an attempt by a party to a conflict - and some of its allies - to impose a global silence regarding its actions and policies. That said, we must still identify the relevant context. Below is some of the broad background of the story, as well as the narrower context with immediate relevance to the issue at hand – conducting interviews with propagandists for Israel post-October 7.
The Context – Broad and Narrow
From the Jordan river to the Mediterranean Sea, Israel subjects Palestinians to different forms of oppression and discrimination. These should be explored in news and features and explainers, along with first-hand accounts of daily reality for Palestinians living under Israeli rule, explorations of various ways they resist - and all the ensuing dynamics.
Settlement expansion in the West Bank,[1] army,[2] and state-backed settler violence,[3] and the continuous displacement [4] of Palestinians are all central to the story, in addition to Israel’s plans to annex [5] more occupied Palestinian land. These things were escalating to in the run-up to October 7. Of particular relevance to this round of fighting is the Israeli prison system - a cruel and prominent tool of oppression of Palestinians.[6] The cumulative impact of wars and siege on Gaza over the years is also central.
These are some of the topics which should already be adequately reflected on our website, ready to be flagged up and linked to as background to the major unfolding story. The extent to which this is (or is not) the case is beyond the scope of this paper. Such context should also be at the forefront of presenters’ minds, and some of it can and often should be brought up during interviews, depending on various factors, including what Israeli guests happen to say.
Closely linked to the above is the ideology of the current Israeli government, which has often been portrayed as the most extreme in Israeli history. It is headed by Benjamin Netanyahu,[7] an opponent of Palestinian self-determination, who’d surrounded himself with people who held even more extreme views and pushed for more extreme violence against Palestinians.[8] Israel was becoming louder and clearer about its intentions, with many expert observers saying the rise of the far-right was leading to a growing push to somehow translate Israel’s ‘territorial victory’ into a ‘demographic victory,'[9] and ‘ethnically cleanse all territories under Israeli rule’ of Palestinians.[10]
Another crucial piece of context for our purpose is the so-called Dahiya Doctrine,[11] an Israeli military doctrine that was articulated in the wake of the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, and put into practice later in Gaza. In the words of Gadi Eisenkot, at the time head of the Israeli Northern Command and currently a member of the war cabinet:
“What happened in the Dahiya quarter of Beirut in 2006 will happen in every village from which Israel is fired on. . . . We will apply disproportionate force on it and cause great damage and destruction there. From our standpoint, these are not civilian villages, they are military bases. . . . This is not a recommendation. This is a plan. And it has been approved.”
Finally, after the attack by Hamas on October 7, Israeli leaders and officials made statements relating to how Israel intends to conduct its war. The defence minister Yoav Gallant said, on October 9: ‘we are fighting human animals and we act accordingly’,[12] and on the tenth, that he’d ‘removed every restriction’ on the army.[13] An army spokesman said on the same day that the ‘emphasis is on damage and not on accuracy’.[14] There are many more such statements but I will only mention these, as they were made on or before the tenth of October, the starting point for the period under observation, and they have direct relevance to the question of Israel’s conduct of the war.
The above information could shed light on the aims and motivations of the Israeli government after October 7, and is therefore of vital importance for the purposes of interviewing anyone defending its conduct, and claiming it is acting in line with international humanitarian law. Key here is to take all of it together as a body of context, evidence, and expert opinion, suggesting:
- that Israel appears to place little to no restraint on its army when it comes to Palestinian civilians, and perhaps actively seeks to harm them.
- that Israel’s aims and policies after October 7 are in many ways simply a continuation– albeit dramatically escalated - of its aims and policies before October 7, and that the current Israeli government may well be seeking to achieve a permanent and decisive destruction of any chance of Palestinian self-determination.
Enter Israel’s West-facing propagandists, whose task is to convince audiences that Israel is acting within the constraints of international humanitarian law, waging war only against armed Palestinian factions, and aiming – to the extent it can – to prevent harm to civilians. It should not be controversial to state that the above should be used to pose a challenge to Israeli guests that is both rigorous and fair. While it can’t all be put forth in every interview, at least some of it should be, and all of it - and more - should be reflected across a range of interviews over a period of time.
Observations
I’ve looked into 22 interviews with Israeli guests - mostly current officials, a few former officials, army officers, politicians, and a ‘human rights activist’. All of them were conducted between October 10 and October 25 – on the News Channel. They don’t necessarily cover every interview with Israeli guests on the Channel during that period.
The main findings - for the purposes of this paper - are these:
- There was no challenge about different manifestations of what appears to be the Israeli government’s drive to destroy any chance of Palestinian self-determination, about Israeli officials in positions of power who had incited extreme violence against Palestinians prior to October 7, or what all of that might suggest about the motivations driving Israel’s conduct of the war.
- I found one single reference by a BBC presenter to one of the statements I mentioned above. It was the only such mention in 22 interviews that took place over a period of 15 days. In that exception to the rule, the issue was framed in terms of the potential legal and reputational harm to Israel. In other interviews, Israeli guests repeated claims that are at odds with such statements from top Israeli leaders, without the statements being mentioned by presenters.
- The Dahiya Doctrine is not mentioned in any of these interviews.
Had such omission occurred in one or two interviews, it might plausibly be explained in terms of the pressures of on-air coverage, or a unique set of circumstances surrounding particular interviews. But consistent omission of such crucial context raises some pressing questions: can it possibly be accidental, or is it the result of editorial choices and direction? If the latter, by whom, and why? In any case, the sole exception serves to highlight the rule; it would appear that the intent of the Israeli government is beyond question on the BBC, no matter the evidence, and that there is a ceiling on the kind of scrutiny allowed of the Israeli government, to the exclusion of any possibility of deliberate harm to civilians.
Within these limitations, Israeli officials are questioned on the BBC about Israel’s conduct, at times with rigour. There are some references to the siege of Gaza, one or two to the occupation, one or two mentions of charges of forcible transfer in relation to Israel’s evacuation orders, and an instance in which the words ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’ were mentioned, with attribution to a Palestinian guest. I also saw one or two interviews in which the subject of incitement against Palestinians – generally – was touched upon, as well as the lack of political progress –in general terms - before the attacks. These are mostly exceptions to general lines of questioning. Much more frequent are challenges about the number of civilian casualties, about whether there are safe zones within the Gaza Strip, about Israel cutting off fuel, water and electricity and other such issues relating to the humanitarian situation in Gaza.
It is important to note that the fact that such challenges are posed in no way diminishes the significance of the systematic omission described above. Such omission sets the terms of acceptable debate in line with the framework of Israel’s west-facing propaganda, and thus cements that framework and adopts its underlying assumptions. The main assumption is that Israel is trying to avoid harming Palestinian civilians as it conducts a war of self-defence. Thus, discussions between BBC presenters and Israeli propagandists are centred on the question of whether Israel is trying hard enough, or acting intelligently enough, to achieve its goal of ‘crushing’ and ‘dismantling’ Hamas without harming civilians – or its reputation. This framework is cemented because evidence to the contrary is erased.
Conclusions
There appears to be a ceiling on questioning Israeli officials and propagandists, expressed in the consistent failure of presenters to use crucial evidence to challenge Israel’s west-facing propaganda. Lines of challenge which are obvious to pursue and which would cast doubt on Israel’s west-facing messaging are conspicuously and consistently not pursued by BBC presenters. Important topics for future exploration include interviews with Palestinians, as well as explainers, packages, live correspondent reports, features, and other content – especially (but not exclusively) on BBC News online.
But even on its own, an examination of interviews is revealing. Interviews are about questions, a first and basic step in any search for truth. Fairly and rigorously conducted, they allow us to test claims against evidence; to the extent that guests are truthful, their positions would withstand scrutiny; to the extent they’re not, the proper challenge would unmask inconsistencies, inaccuracies, and other forms of disinformation. If, however, the relevant questions are not asked, entire lines of thought and inquiry are extinguished, and a central part of reality – the very heart of the story – is placed out of view. Unfettered by proper challenge, propagandists for Israel can then paint a picture of a peaceful state that has the misfortune of existing alongside pure evil, and present it as the backdrop to the unfolding horror in Gaza.
Disclaimers:
- The above is by no means a comprehensive account of all the things that went unchallenged, or insufficiently challenged, in the interviews in question.
- None of the above is meant to suggest anything about the intentions of individuals in the BBC, whether presenters, producers, editors, or anyone involved directly or indirectly in the programs in which these interviews were aired.
- Further details about the interviews are available upon the request of management.
- The volume of BBC output is too large for a single paper to offer a comprehensive assessment. More light can (and should) be shed by further studies.
[1] On February 22-23, an Israeli government panel advanced plans to construct over seven thousand new housing units in various settlements, the largest such decision ever issued at a single planning meeting. The panel also scheduled a March meeting to discuss objections to the highly contentious E-1 project east of municipal Jerusalem, which would block north-south Palestinian contiguity in the West Bank. Israel has previously pulled back from building E-1 amid U.S. pressure, but the rise of far-right parties in Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s government makes it unclear whether this pattern will continue.
27 SEPTEMBER 2023: Tor Wennesland, United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, speaking via videoconference, reported ongoing settlement activity by Israeli authorities who advanced plans for 6,300 housing units in Area C, and approximately 3,580 housing units in East Jerusalem, pointing to the Israeli Government’s administrative actions that likely expedited settlement expansion. “In a continuing trend, many Palestinians, including children, left from their communities citing violence by settlers and shrinking grazing land,” he said.
https://press.un.org/en/2023/sc15424.doc.htm
[2]
Measured as a monthly average, 2022 is the deadliest year for Palestinians in the West Bank since the United Nations started systematically counting fatalities in 2005, with 127 Palestinians killed so far this year.
04 April, 2023
The number of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank since the beginning of 2023 has reached 95, including 17 minors and two elderly, after the killing of 21-year-old Mohamad Hallaq and 43-year-old Mohammad Al-Juneidi Abu Bakr, during a military raid on Nablus on Monday.
https://www.newarab.com/news/95-palestinians-killed-israel-first-quarter-2023
[3] 21 Sep 2023
Settler violence has been increasing across the West Bank over the past years. Three settler related incidents per day occurred on average in the first eight months of 2023 compared to an average of two per day in 2022 and one per day the year before. This is the highest daily average of settler-related incidents affecting Palestinians since the UN started recording this data in 2006
[4] 10. Aug 2023
Israeli settler violence and illegal takeover of Palestinian lands have forcibly transferred nearly 500 Palestinians from seven communities, over the past 20 months…
“There are entire Palestinian communities being wiped off the map, a shameful legacy of unrelenting violence, intimidation and harassment perpetuated by Israeli settlers and, in some cases, encouraged by Israeli authorities,” said Ana Povrzenic, NRC’s country director for Palestine.
“The rapid establishment of settlement outposts and takeover of Palestinian land is choking Palestinian communities, destroying their livelihoods, and putting Palestinian lives at risk. Palestinians have no choice but to flee, leaving behind their homes, schools, and jobs.”
[5] 26 July 2023
“Israel’s continuous annexation of portions of the occupied Palestinian territory, now focusing on large swathes of the West Bank after unlawfully annexing east Jerusalem, suggests that a concrete effort may be under way to annex the entire occupied Palestinian territory in violation of international law,” the experts said.
ADMINISTRATIVE DETENTION AS A TOOL OF OPPRESSION AND DOMINATION
https://www.addameer.org/media/4898
THE IMPACT OF ISRAEL’S NEW ULTRANATIONALIST GOVERNMENT ON THE PALESTINIAN PRISONERS’ MOVEMENT
https://www.addameer.org/media/4978
TORTURE AND ILL-TREATMENT BEYOND INTERROGATION: VIOLENT RAIDS AGAINST PALESTINIAN PRISONERS IN ISRAELI OCCUPATION PRISONS
https://www.addameer.org/media/4429
IMPRISONMENT OF CHILDREN
https://www.addameer.org/the_prisoners/children
[7] 22 September 2023,
Netanyahu brandishes map of Israel that includes West Bank and Gaza at UN speech
[8] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dZUT1wPVPw
In February 2023 Israel’s governing coalition transferred most of the governing powers over the West Bank to the additional minister of defence, effectively designating Bezalel Smotrich, a civilian official, as the de facto governor of the occupied West Bank. The experts noted that the move solidified Israel’s annexation of occupied territory.
Palestine’s Huwara should be wiped out: Top Israeli minister (1 Mar 2023), https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/3/1/israel-arrests-settlers-after-anti-palestinian-pogrom
[9] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dZUT1wPVPw
[10] ‘Indeed, the ultimate purpose of the judicial overhaul is to tighten restrictions on Gaza, deprive Palestinians of equal rights both beyond the Green Line and within it, annex more land, and ethnically cleanse all territories under Israeli rule of their Palestinian population.’
https://sites.google.com/view/israel-elephant-in-the-room/aug-23-elephant-in-the-room-petition
Over 1,000 academics, public figures say Israel judicial overhaul about ethnically cleansing Palestinians (11 August, 2023) https://www.newarab.com/news/ethnic-cleansing-aim-israel-judicial-reform-scholars-say
[11] The Dahiya Doctrine, Proportionality, and War Crimes
… a sinister strategy implemented by the Israeli military at least since the 2006 assault on Lebanon, which goes by the name “Dahiya doctrine.” The doctrine was revealed publicly by Maj. Gen. Gadi Eizenkot, who was head of the Northern Command in 2006, and who has been deputy chief of staff of the so-called Israel Defense Forces (IDF), the Israeli army, since 2013. After an entire southern suburb of Beirut, known as the Dahiya, had been devastated from the air by troops under his command using two-thousand-pound bombs and other similar ordnance, Eizenkot explicitly laid out what this doctrine entailed in 2008. He stated: “What happened in the Dahiya quarter of Beirut in 2006 will happen in every village from which Israel is fired on. . . . We will apply disproportionate force on it and cause great damage and destruction there. From our standpoint, these are not civilian villages, they are military bases. . . . This is not a recommendation. This is a plan. And it has been approved.”
… it is the very same that has now been deployed against Gaza for the third time in the past six years. Israeli military correspondents and security analysts repeatedly reported that the Dahiya doctrine was Israel's strategy throughout the war in Gaza this past summer. [7]
https://www.palestine-studies.org/en/node/186668
UN presses for prosecutions in damning report of Hamas and Israel conduct (Tue 15 Sep 2009)
…Their key findings are:
Israel's incursion was "a deliberately disproportionate attack designed to punish, humiliate and terrorise a civilian population, radically diminish its local economic capacity both to work and to provide for itself and to force upon it an ever-increasing sense of dependency and vulnerability".
Israeli forces committed "grave breaches of the fourth Geneva convention" which gave rise to "individual criminal responsibility", meaning soldiers could face prosecution.
Israeli troops used Palestinian civilians as human shields, a war crime.
Israel's economic blockade of Gaza in the years before the war amounted to "collective punishment intentionally inflicted by the government of Israel on the people of the Gaza Strip".
Israeli actions depriving Gazans of means of subsistence, employment, housing and water, and denying their freedom of movement, "could lead a competent court to find that the crime of persecution, a crime against humanity, had been committed".
Palestinian rocket attacks did not distinguish between civilian and military targets, caused terror among Israeli civilians and "would constitute war crimes and may amount to crimes against humanity".
Gaza's security forces, controlled by Hamas, carried out extrajudicial executions and the arbitrary arrest, detention and ill-treatment of people, especially political opponents.
Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held captive in Gaza for more than three years, is a prisoner of war and should be released on humanitarian grounds.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/sep/15/israel-blamed-for-gaza-war-crimes
[12] Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant declared on 9 October that “we are fighting human animals and we act accordingly”.
https://opiniojuris.org/2023/10/18/public-statement-scholars-warn-of-potential-genocide-in-gaza/
[13] "We will not allow a reality in which Israeli children are murdered," Gallant said in a meeting with Israeli soldiers near the southern border on Tuesday, according to the AP. "I have removed every restriction -- we will eliminate anyone who fights us, and use every measure at our disposal."
"Israel war: Israeli defense minister tells troops all ‘restraints’ lifted in Gaza offensive" By Brady Knox
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/?p=2455607
[14] Israeli army: 'Emphasis is on damage and not on accuracy' (10 October 2023 12:45 BST) https://www.middleeasteye.net/live-update/israeli-army-emphasis-damage-and-not-accuracy