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Hamas’ Media Tyranny: A Persistent War on Truth

A Palestinian Hamas terrorist shakes hands with a child as they stand guard as people gather on the day of the handover of Israeli hostages, as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, Feb. 22, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Ramadan Abed

Since assuming de facto control of Gaza in 2007, Hamas has increasingly restricted information sharing, creating a distorted media image that hides its crimes and portrays Israel as the primary antagonist.

Former Associated Press journalist Matti Friedman was the first to widely publicize Hamas’ media control in 2014, and it remains significant in 2025, overshadowing Israel’s sincere attempts at openness.

The extent of Hamas’ press control was highlighted in a 2022 Washington Times report, which noted that foreign journalists were barred from covering Gazans killed by misfired Palestinian rockets and required the press to attribute all casualties to Israel.

Hamas also ordered that all foreign correspondents employ Palestinian “sponsors,” who must submit full reports on where those correspondents go, what they do, and any “illogical questions” they ask.

Local journalists have been known to face extremely dangerous coercion — quite recently, in fact. The Jerusalem Post reported that in November 2023, Gaza journalist Tawfiq Abu Jarad was detained in Rafah by masked men claiming to be Hamas members, accused of reporting on civil unrest, and released only after promising to stop. In late April 2025, he received a threatening call warning him not to cover a female-led protest in Beit Lahia.

This is one of many stories that have been extensively documented.

Hamas’ grip on journalistic access extends beyond Gaza. Its influence shaped global reports such as the 2009 UN Fact-Finding Mission (the Goldstone Report), commissioned by the UN Human Rights Council after the 2008–2009 Gaza War. Former Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren criticized the report for relying heavily on Hamas-selected witnesses. The report ignored Hamas’s strategy of embedding militants in civilian populations and its intentional firing of over 7,000 rockets at Israeli civilian areas.

Another UN-related example occurred in 2022. UN official Sarah Muscroft, based in eastern Jerusalem, faced backlash after tweeting criticism of Palestinian Islamic Jihad’s indiscriminate rocket attacks. Pro-Palestinian activists accused her of “blaming the victim” despite the tweet’s factual basis, and she was transferred.

Hamas also manipulates imagery and stages photos. Friedman described cameramen at Al-Shifa Hospital being instructed to stop filming injured Hamas fighters, maintaining the illusion that only civilians were being hurt. Digital distortions have added new layers of misinformation. The New York Times and AP News reported in 2023 that the Gaza conflict produced AI-generated images of mutilated babies and recycled Syrian footage misattributed to Israel.

While some visuals were genuine, many were fabricated — distorted anatomy, mismatched lighting, and deepfake anomalies — designed to provoke outrage rather than report truth.

A telling contrast involves the “doll controversy.” In November 2023, The Jerusalem Post mistakenly claimed a viral image of a deceased Palestinian baby was a staged doll. The article was retracted and an apology issued on X (formerly Twitter) on December 2, after identifying the child as Muhammad Hani Al-Zahar, killed in an Israeli airstrike. This demonstrated commitment to transparency, even at reputational cost.

By contrast, Hamas’ falsehoods are rarely corrected and almost never acknowledged. A striking exception occurred in late 2023 when Hamas claimed — and the worldwide media dutifully reported — that an Israeli missile had struck a Gaza hospital and killed hundreds. It was later revealed to be an errant Palestinian missile, with a much lower death toll — but the damage was done, and the media issued half-hearted corrections, at best.

Hamas also releases distorted casualty numbers — which don’t separate terrorist fighters from the civilian population — and the media dutifully reports them.

Yet the world keeps falling for this, because most of the media plays along — whether out of fear, ideological bias, or pressure from NGOs hostile to Israel. Headlines scream “Israel Pounds Gaza,” omitting that rockets were launched from schools or hospitals. Israeli claims are often treated with suspicion until proven true, long after the narrative damage is done.

For meaningful change, the global media must treat Gaza as a theater of information warfare. Every image and interview should carry a digital asterisk. Verification must be standard — not optional. Truth requires context, not censorship.

The question is not whether Hamas lies — it lies, distorts, and controls information, even that of outsiders. The real question is: will the world keep rewarding the lie? History and ethics demand we stop doing so.

Alexander Mermelstein, a recent USC graduate with a Master’s in Public Policy and Data Science, is an aspiring policy researcher focused on Middle East affairs and combating antisemitism.

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Toronto Film Festival Denies Blocking Oct. 7 Doc Over Censorship, Says Legal Team, Filmmaker Working to Screen It

Skyline of Toronto, Canada. Photo Credit: Aaron Davis, Wikimedia Commons, June 2020.

The CEO of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) said late Wednesday that efforts are being made to ensure the screening of a documentary about the Hamas-led deadly massacre in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, after receiving backlash for removing the film from the festival’s lineup.

TIFF CEO Bailey Cameron also denied claims about censoring “The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue.”

“I want to be clear: Claims that the film was rejected due to censorship are unequivocally false,” Bailey said in a released statement. “I remain committed to working with the filmmaker to meet TIFF’s screening requirements to allow the film to be screened at this year’s festival. I have asked our legal team to work with the filmmaker on considering all options available.”

The festival will run from Sept. 4-14, and the film is currently not listed on the festival’s official website.

The documentary from Canadian director Barry Avrich follows grandfather and retired IDF Maj. Gen. Noam Tibon as he rescues his family, including two granddaughters, from Hamas terrorists who invaded their home in Nahal Oz during the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack across southern Israel. Tibon also rescued survivors of the Nova Music Festival and helped wounded Israeli soldiers. His heroic efforts were highlighted by “60 Minutes” in October 2023. During the attack, Hamas murdered 1,200 civilians and took 251 others as hostages back to the Gaza Strip. Fifty hostages are still held captive by Hamas in Gaza.

Avi Issacharoff and Lior Raz, the co-creators and writers of the Israeli television series “Fauda,” revealed last year that they are scripting a film about Tibon’s heroism. Tibon has also written opinion pieces for The Algemeiner in previous years and his son published a book about Tibon’s rescue mission on Oct. 7.

Deadline revealed on Tuesday that “The Road Between Us” was removed from the lineup of films being screened at TIFF, because filmmakers did not have “legal clearance” to use footage terrorists themselves filmed while murdering thousands during their deadly rampage. Festival organizers told Deadline in a statement that the film was “withdrawn by TIFF because general requirements for inclusion in the festival, and conditions that were requested when the film was initially invited, were not met, including legal clearance of all footage. The purpose of the requested conditions was to protect TIFF from legal implications and to allow TIFF to manage and mitigate anticipated and known risks around the screening of a film about highly sensitive subject matter, including potential threat of significant disruption.”

Tibon called the decision “absurd and bizarre,” and accused TIFF of “succumbing to pressure and threats” to conceal the truth about what happened during the Oct. 7 attack. “The atrocities committed by Hamas cannot be erased or denied,” he added. The team behind “The Road Between Us” also slammed the reasoning, telling Variety in part: “We are shocked and saddened that a venerable film festival has defied its mission and censored its own programming by refusing this film.”

The move was also condemned by several Jewish groups – including StandWithUs Canada, the Canadian Centre for Jewish and Israeli Affairs, Combat Antisemitism Movement, and Friends of Simon Wiesenthal — and the pro-Israel entertainment industry organization Creative Community for Peace. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar also criticized the move in a post on X, saying there “was no ‘legal clearance’ from Hamas for their GoPro massacre videos.”

“This festival would have asked Hitler or Goebbels for copyright on Auschwitz footage,” said Sa’ar. “This vicious and sickening decision must be cancelled immediately!”

In a statement late Wednesday, Bailey rejected the censorship claims, saying that the misunderstanding “calls for compassion and sensitivity, and I recognize the concerns it has raised among members of the Jewish community and beyond.” He then apologized for “any pain this situation may have caused.”

“It was never my intention to offend or alienate anyone,” he said. “At TIFF, we believe in the transformative power of film to foster understanding and dialogue, especially during challenging times.”

“My intention was to screen ‘The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue,’ which is why I extended the invitation for the film to participate in this year’s festival,” he added. “Given the sensitive and significant nature of the film’s subject, I believe that it tells an important story and contributes to the rich tapestry of perspectives in our lineup – stories that resonate both here at home and around the world … While we are not a political organization, TIFF will always strive to present our programming in a safe, inclusive environment.”

Bailey concluded by asking for “patience and understanding as we navigate this complex landscape.”

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UEFA Accused of Promoting Antisemitic Blood Libel With ‘Stop Killing Children’ Banner at Super Cup Match

A banner displayed by the UEFA at a match on Aug. 13, 2025 at the UEFA Super Cup in Udine, Italy. Photo: X/UEFA

The British charity Campaign Against Antisemitism accused the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) of double standards and promoting a centuries-old, antisemitic blood libel following the union’s decision to display a banner that said “Stop Killing Children – Stop Killing Civilians” before a match on Wednesday night.

UEFA unfurled the banner before the start of the UEFA Super Cup final in Udine, Italy, between Paris Saint-Germain and London’s Tottenham Hotspur, the latter of which has a large Jewish fanbase. The banner was featured on the field before kick-off as the players lined up inside the Stadio Friuli.

UEFA said on Wednesday that its Foundation for Children invited two refugee children from the Gaza Strip, who have been impacted by the Israel-Hamas war, to take part in the medals ceremony at the match, and nine children who are refugees in Italy participated in the opening ceremony by holding the banner. The nine children are from different conflict zones around the world including Afghanistan, Iraq, Nigeria, “Palestine,” and Ukraine, according to the UEFA.

Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) criticized the offensive banner in a post on X, claiming that the union’s “selective outrage” about the Israel-Hamas war “tells us everything about the double standard that still poisons European discourse on Jews.”

The UEFA “has said nothing about the Jewish hostages kept in barbaric captivity for almost two years, nor about the incessant attacks on Israeli civilians throughout this war from terrorists in Gaza and throughout the Middle East,” CAA noted. “But all of sudden, they have chosen a Spurs match — a club commonly associated with the Jewish community — to unfurl this banner.”

“For centuries, Europe has traded in the blood libel that Jews kill children, and clearly the trope remains as popular as ever. UEFA says that ‘the message is clear.’ After two years with no acknowledgement of the Jewish children murdered, maimed and traumatized by this war, the message is clear indeed,” CAA added.

Speaking to The Times, a UEFA insider claimed the banner was “not political but about humanity — in fact you could say it is just common sense.”

In the past, soccer clubs have been penalized by the UEFA for displaying political banners. In 2016, Scotland’s Celtic soccer team was fined after its fans waved Palestinian flags during a match against Israel’s Hapoel Beer Sheva. UEFA viewed the flags as “illicit” banners. Celtic was also fined in 2013 after an “illicit” banner was displayed by fans during a Champions League match against AC Milan. However, Celtic was ultimately not fined when fans displayed an oversized anti-Israel banner at a match earlier this year.

Most recently, UEFA fined the Serbian team Partizan Belgrade after fans displayed a “Kosovo is Serbia” banner at a match, the Associated Press reported.

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Israeli Spy Chief Visits Qatar to Revive Gaza Talks

David Barnea, the head of the Israeli Mossad, attends an honor guard ceremony for Israel’s incoming military chief Herzi Halevi at Israel’s Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv, Israel, Jan. 16, 2023. Photo: REUTERS/Amir Cohen

The head of Israel’s Mossad spy agency visited Qatar on Thursday to revive Gaza ceasefire talks, according to multiple reports.

Two Israeli officials told Reuters about the meeting, which was the most high-level talks between Israel and mediators since negotiations broke down last month.

David Barnea met with Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman al-Thani to discuss the Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal, according to Axios, which reported that the head of Israel’s national intelligence agency stressed in his meetings that the Israeli cabinet’s decision to take military control of Gaza City is not a bluff. Israel is prepared to proceed with the plan if there is no progress in negotiations to reach a ceasefire and hostage-release deal, a source familiar with the meeting told the outlet.

The Israeli publication Ynet also said in a report that a private jet linked to the Mossad landed in Doha on Thursday, fueling speculation that Barnea arrived in the Qatari capital for the first time since negotiations faltered three weeks ago.

Israel’s security cabinet approved a plan last week to take control of Gaza City, which followed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying hours earlier that Israel intended to take military control of the entire enclave temporarily until it can hand governance over to Arab authorities.

“We intend to control all of Gaza. We don’t want to keep it. We want a security perimeter. We ‘want to govern [Gaza]. We don’t want to be there as a governing body. We want to hand Gaza over to Arab forces that will govern [the territory] properly,” Netanyahu said in an interview with Fox News.

“We want to liberate ourselves and liberate the people of Gaza from the awful terror of Hamas,” the Israeli premier added. “In order to assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza and to pass it to civilian governance … The only way that you’re [going to] have a different future is to get rid of this neo-Nazi army. Hamas are monsters.”

Israel’s new military plan lists five objectives: disarming Hamas, returning all hostages kidnapped by the terrorist group, demilitarizing Gaza, taking security control of the territory, and establishing “an alternative civil administration that is neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority.”

“The IDF [Israel Defense Forces] will prepare to take control of Gaza City while providing humanitarian aid to the civilian population outside the combat zones,” Israel’s military said in a statement last week.

Many observers have argued that, while Israel appears intent on proceeding with its military plan, the announcement can also serve as a way to pressure the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas, which has ruled Gaza for nearly two decades, to agree to a satisfactory truce.

Israel and the United States both recalled their negotiators from Gaza ceasefire talks in Qatar in late July, with US envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff saying that Hamas has not been acting in good faith and “clearly shows a lack of desire” to reach a deal despite weeks of mediated discussions with the terrorist group.

Since then, there has been a renewed push for a comprehensive deal to end the war, release of all remaining hostages held by Hamas, and avert an Israeli offensive. The US, Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey are all reportedly involved in efforts to revive and ultimately draft a comprehensive deal.

Barnea’s visit on Thursday coincides with ongoing talks in Cairo between Hamas leaders and Egyptian officials. A Hamas delegation had visited Istanbul over the weekend and met with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan for talks on Gaza.

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