Gaza journalist Hassan Aslih killed in Israeli strike on hospital

Rushdi Abualouf
Gaza correspondent, Cairo
EPA Brown buildings are seen under a cloudy sky, with a small figure walking past and debris on the groundEPA
Hassan Aslih was being treated at Nasser hospital when he was killed in an air strike

An Israeli air strike on the emergency department of Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza has killed a well-known Palestinian photojournalist, medical sources and eyewitnesses say.

Hassan Aslih, who was being treated for injuries from a previous Israeli strike, was targeted in what witnesses described as a drone attack on the hospital's surgical wing.

A doctor there confirmed that Aslih had been at the hospital for nearly a month after surviving an air strike on the same facility in April.

The Israeli military had previously accused Aslih of involvement in the 7 October Hamas attack on Israel. The strike in April killed Aslih's colleague Helmi al-Faqawi and wounded several other journalists.

At the time, Ismail al-Thawabta, director of the Hamas-run government media office, said Israel's accusations against Aslih were "false" and that Aslih had no political affiliation.

"The occupation's claim that Aslih crossed into the occupied land and took part in the 7 October incidents is part of a policy to discredit and fabricate that the occupation adopts to justify attacks on journalists and media personnel," Thawabta told Reuters agency on 7 April.

Aslih had published dozens of photos and videos documenting the 7 October Hamas assault from inside Israeli territory.

Aslih worked for years as a freelance photojournalist with both international and local news agencies. He was widely respected in Gaza for his extensive coverage of the conflict, often documenting events from the front lines. He has more than half a million followers on Instagram, where he documents the war.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had attacked Nasser Hospital in a "a targeted attack on key terrorists", but did not name Aslih.

It said the hospital was being used by Hamas to "carry out terrorist plots against Israeli forces and citizens".

The Israeli military has repeatedly attacked what it claims are Hamas command-and-control centres based in hospitals or gunmen sheltering there. Hamas denies using hospitals in this way.

The UN's human rights office has condemned what it calls Israel's "pattern of deadly attacks on and near hospitals in Gaza", saying they could amount to war crimes or crimes against humanity.

The Israel-Gaza war is the deadliest conflict for journalists in history, according to Brown University's Watson Institute for Public Affairs, with more than 232 journalists killed in Gaza since the 7 October attacks.

The aid agency Médecins Sans Frontières said on X that the strike on Nasser hospital killed one other person and injured a further 12, and called for a halt to the targeting of medical facilities.

The attack was "horrific", said emergency coordinator Clare Manera, adding that it came at a time when healthcare workers in the strip were "struggling to treat patients with little to no supplies".