Global news outlets urge Israel to allow Gaza access

Published May 1, 2026 Updated May 1, 2026 07:15am

JERUSALEM: Leaders from more than two dozen global news organisations signed an open letter published on Thursday calling for Israel to allow international media to independently enter the Gaza Strip.

“In every conflict, journalists face limits on access to war zones. But Gaza is different. For more than 930 days, Israel has barred foreign reporters from independently entering the territory,” said the letter, endorsed by editors from 31 media organisations.

They included the New York Times, the BBC, the Washington Post, Le Monde, and news agencies AP, Reuters, and AFP.

“Being on the ground is essential,” the letter added, noting that in other recent conflict zones, “foreign correspondents have still been able to report relatively independently”.

Since the outbreak of the Gaza conflict in Oct 2023, the Israeli government has barred foreign journalists from independently entering the blockaded territory.

Instead, Israel has allowed only a limited number of reporters to enter Gaza on a case-by-case basis on embeds with its military.

The ban “has pushed the responsibility for covering this devastating war and its aftermath almost entirely on our Palestinian colleagues”, the letter said, adding that “they should not have to shoulder this burden alone, and they should be protected”.

The open letter was published by the Foreign Press Association, which represents hundreds of journalists in Israel and the Palestinian territories and which filed a petition with the Israeli supreme court in 2024 seeking free and independent Gaza access.

The court has since granted the Israeli government several extensions to submit its response.

“Israel has given different reasons for maintaining this blackout, claiming at various times that soldiers or journalists would be in danger. But the heaviest fighting is over and there is a ceasefire in place,” the letter said.

It added that Israeli authorities had not responded to requests for access and dialogue, and that court appeals had gone unanswered.

“Freedom of the press is a basic value in any open society. It is time for the delays to end,” the letter said.

Published in Dawn, May 1st, 2026

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