Conflating illegal forced displacement with Israel's temporary evacuation of civilians for their own safety, Deutsche Welle casts Israel's evacuation of Gaza Strip residents from combat areas for their protection as no less than a potential crime against humanity.
MSNBC's Ayman Mohyeldin, Antonio Hylton and Catherine Rampell fail to correct the record after Pulitzer Prize winner Mosab Abu Toha falsely and repeatedly identified released hostage Emily Damari, a civilian kidnapped from her home, as a soldier.
Calling a terror operative a journalist doesn’t make him one, CAMERA's Tamar Sternthal writes in The Algemeiner. The AP’s rough schooling in this lesson began with a mundane correspondence, progressed to the most devastating slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust, and continued with a hugely embarrassing court case.
Maltese authorities have yet to establish that the Conscience is carrying humanitarian aid for the Gaza Strip, but Reuters nevertheless takes the anti-Israel passengers on their unverified word. Meanwhile, Saudi Al-Arabiya reported that Hamas organized the planned voyage.
More than a year and a half after multiple foreign intelligence sources ruled out an Israeli airstrike as responsible for the deadly Al-Ahli hospital blast, pointing instead to an errant Palestinian rocket, some media outlets regress into the murky fog of war mode.
UPDATE: CAMERA prompts correction at ABC after the network reported as fact a disputed allegation that Israel hit a U.N. facility in Deir Al-Balah, killing a U.N. worker. The amended article acknowledges Israel's denial that it operated in that area.
Erasing the Houthis' foundational call of "Death to America, Death to Israel, Curse on the Jews," Reuters recasts the designated terror group as a movement representing a persecuted minority fighting for its (unspecified) interests.
The Los Angeles Times falsely reports that "750,000 Palestinians were expelled" in 1948, ignoring that the vast majority of the Palestinian Arab refugees fled in 1948 of their own accord, often at the behest of their leadership.
UPDATE: After communication from CAMERA staff and members of the public, The Los Angeles Times finally corrects the demonstrably false claim that most of the remaining hostages are soldiers. In fact, the overwhelming majority of those then remaining -- 60 out of 73 -- are civilians.
Using the current Israel-Hamas ceasefire as their cue to place Palestinian terrorists on equal footing as innocent Israeli hostages, some underperforming journalists are sanitizing the bloody records of hardcore terrorists.