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A view of the vessels passing through Strait of Hormuz following the two-week temporary ceasefire reached between the United States and Iran on the condition that the strait be reopened, seen in Oman on April 08, 2026. [Shadi J. H. Alassar – Anadolu Agency]
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy detained two commercial cargo ships in the Strait of Hormuz, citing unauthorized operations and alleged ties to Israel, according to a report Friday.
The IRGC identified the vessels as the “MSC-Francesca” and the “Epaminondas,” both operating under the MSC shipping line, Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency reported.
Tehran accused the ships of breaching maritime regulations, interfering with navigation systems, and endangering other vessels in the waterway.
The report said Iranian authorities said the ships were allegedly attempting to pass through the strait undetected before being intercepted and escorted into Iranian territorial waters.
Since the war initiated by the US and Israel against Iran began Feb. 28, Tehran has maintained control of the Strait of Hormuz, followed by an American naval blockade on April 13, hitting global energy supplies, mostly across Asia.
Nigel Farage objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone object to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza’s hospitals and universities, mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.Keir Starmer explains that UK is actively supporting Israel’s genocidal expansion and repeats his previous quotation that he supports Zionism “without qualification”. Keir Starmer said “I said it loud and clear – and meant it – that I support Zionism without qualification.” here: https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/keir-starmer-interview-i-will-work-to-eradicate-antisemitism-from-day-one/Donald Trump calls for help from NATO allies in securing the Strait of Hormuz despite saying on 7 March 2026 that they don’t need people to join wars after they’ve already won. He’s challenged with the claim that he lies as much as the IDF.
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Missiles launched by Iran in retaliation for US and Israeli attacks are seen over the skies of Jerusalem, on March 24, 2026. [Mostafa Alkharouf – Anadolu Agency]
A Defense Ministry’s spokesperson said most of Iran’s missile capabilities have been “unused” on the war with the US, Tasnim News reported Saturday.
Gen. Reza Talaei-Nik said Iran’s “significant portion of the missile capabilities remains unused,” according to the report by the semi-official news agency.
Arguing that Iranian forces maintained the upper hand throughout the conflict, he said, “Our forces maintained complete air superiority over the occupied territories of the Zionist (Israeli) territory, and a portion of our missile capabilities were utilized during the 40-day war.”
Regarding naval confrontations, he claimed that hostile warships repeatedly retreated hundreds of kilometers from the Sea of Oman in response to decisive actions by Iranian forces.
Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has been severely disrupted since the US and Israel initiated a war against Iran beginning Feb. 28, rattling global energy markets and raising fears of prolonged economic damage.
Nigel Farage objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone object to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza’s hospitals and universities, mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.Keir Starmer explains that UK is actively supporting Israel’s genocidal expansion and repeats his previous quotation that he supports Zionism “without qualification”. Keir Starmer said “I said it loud and clear – and meant it – that I support Zionism without qualification.” here: https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/keir-starmer-interview-i-will-work-to-eradicate-antisemitism-from-day-one/Donald Trump calls for help from NATO allies in securing the Strait of Hormuz despite saying on 7 March 2026 that they don’t need people to join wars after they’ve already won. He’s challenged with the claim that he lies as much as the IDF.
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Fatih Varol, attorney and Member of the Board of Directors of the Global Sumud Flotilla, is seen during an exclusive interview, where she evaluates the preparations of the Global Sumud Flotilla’s “2026 Spring Mission”, in Sicily, Italy, on April 24, 2026. [Barış Seçkin – Anadolu Agency]
Turkish activists participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla’s Spring 2026 Mission have reaffirmed their determination to break the blockade on Gaza and deliver humanitarian assistance, Anadolu reports.
Fatih Varol, a board member of the Global Sumud Flotilla, told Anadolu that the Turkish delegation is among the initiative’s most significant components.
“Turkiye has deep-rooted historical ties with Palestine. As a people, we feel the tragedy unfolding in Gaza much more profoundly. In this regard, both public support in Turkiye and the backing of Turkish civil society organizations are very strong,” he said.
Varol said the Turkish delegation has contributed not only to the fleet’s administration and coordination, but also to vessel preparations at Mediterranean ports through financial support.
He also noted that more than 10 lawmakers from both governing and opposition parties in Turkiye attended the Global Sumud Parliamentarians Congress in Brussels on April 22, forming the diplomatic arm of the mission.
According to Varol, lawmakers from around the world agreed during the meeting to raise calls in their respective parliaments to end the genocide in Gaza, lift the blockade on Palestine, ensure Israel complies with international law, and activate international criminal justice mechanisms.
He said the initiative would help increase international political pressure on Israel and grow through coordinated efforts aimed at paving the way for a freer world.
Gorkem Duru, another Turkish activist, said participants are preparing to sail toward Gaza as part of the 2026 mission, stressing that a “fake ceasefire” has not ended occupation, blockade, or violence.
“Last year, the Global Sumud Flotilla set sail. This year, despite the ceasefire, the blockade and occupation continue, so we are setting out again, stronger and more numerous, to break the blockade,” he said.
Duru added that final preparations are underway at Italy’s Augusta Port, while vessels departing from Barcelona have already arrived.
Activist Omer Aslan, known as the “Local John Wick” due to his resemblance to the character portrayed by Keanu Reeves, said he joined the mission out of humanitarian responsibility.
“While innocent babies and civilians in Gaza suffer oppression and violence, I could not live comfortably in my own country. I joined this peaceful humanitarian action to raise awareness both among my followers and globally,” he said.
Aslan said activists from across the world have joined the flotilla regardless of language, religion, or nationality, united by a common cause.
Flotilla’s Spring 2026 Mission
The Global Sumud Flotilla was created to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza, deliver humanitarian aid, and draw international attention to the situation in the enclave.
Created in 2025 by NGO representatives, activists and volunteers from various countries, the flotilla launched its second mission to Gaza.
Its Spring 2026 Mission departed from Barcelona on April 12 with around 70 vessels and nearly 1,000 participants from 70 countries, significantly larger than a previous mission in September 2025, which included 42 boats and 462 participants.
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Nigel Farage objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone object to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza’s hospitals and universities, mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.Keir Starmer explains that UK is actively supporting Israel’s genocidal expansion and repeats his previous quotation that he supports Zionism “without qualification”. Keir Starmer said “I said it loud and clear – and meant it – that I support Zionism without qualification.” here: https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/keir-starmer-interview-i-will-work-to-eradicate-antisemitism-from-day-one/Donald Trump calls for help from NATO allies in securing the Strait of Hormuz despite saying on 7 March 2026 that they don’t need people to join wars after they’ve already won. He’s challenged with the claim that he lies as much as the IDF.
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People attend funeral ceremony for journalist Amal Khalil, who was killed in an Israeli military strike targeting the village of Tayri, in Nabatieh, Lebanon on April 23, 2026. [Elif Öztürk – Anadolu Agency]
There is a particular cruelty in silencing those whose sole weapon is a camera, a notebook, or a voice. The killing of Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil in southern Lebanon is not an isolated tragedy; it is part of a pattern that is becoming impossible to ignore, and even harder to explain away. In a war already saturated with grief, the deliberate or reckless targeting of journalists signals something deeper than battlefield error. It suggests an erosion of the very rules that once attempted to civilise conflict.
On 22nd April 2026, during what was meant to be a brief, US-mediated ceasefire, Israeli strikes hit a civilian vehicle near al-Tayri. When Khalil and her colleague Zeinab Faraj moved to report on the aftermath, a second strike hit the building where they had taken shelter. Rescue teams attempting to reach them were themselves targeted, delaying aid for hours. By the time access was finally granted, Khalil was dead beneath the rubble.
She became the fourth Lebanese journalist killed in just weeks. The sequence—strike, response, second strike—has been described by observers as a ‘double tap’, a tactic that raises serious legal and moral questions.
The outrage from Lebanese officials was immediate and justified. The language used—“flagrant violation”, “brazen crime”—was not diplomatic excess; it reflected a growing consensus among legal experts and press-freedom organisations that such incidents may constitute grave breaches of international humanitarian law.
Journalists are civilians. That principle is not ambiguous. The Geneva Conventions and the Rome Statute are explicit: targeting civilians, including media workers, is a war crime.
Yet the facts on the ground continue to collide with official denials. Israel maintains that it does not target journalists and often asserts that strikes are aimed at militants. In some cases, it has posthumously alleged links between slain reporters and armed groups. These claims, frequently unsubstantiated, have been repeatedly challenged by organisations such as Human Rights Watch and the Committee to Protect Journalists, which point to video evidence and patterns of strikes on clearly marked media personnel. The dissonance between assertion and evidence is widening, and with it, the credibility gap.
The scale of the violence underscores the urgency. As of March 2026, more than 2,400 people have reportedly been killed in Lebanon, with over a million displaced. Across the broader conflict landscape, including Gaza and the West Bank, dozens of journalists have lost their lives since late 2023. One investigation counted at least 61 journalists killed in that period alone, making it one of the deadliest eras for the profession in modern history. These are not incidental losses; they represent a systemic threat to the flow of information itself.
What is unfolding in Lebanon cannot be disentangled from a far larger and more troubling pattern that has already taken shape in Gaza, where the scale of journalist killings has reached historic proportions.
By late 2025, nearly 250 journalists had been killed since October 2023—more than in Vietnam, Iraq, Syria and Ukraine combined, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists and United Nations assessments.
Gaza has, in effect, become the deadliest environment for media workers ever recorded, a distinction that should unsettle any government that claims allegiance to international humanitarian law. The killing of figures such as Abed Shaat, a clearly identified cameraman struck while documenting an aid convoy, underscores how ambiguity has replaced accountability, and how denial has become routine rather than exceptional. experts warn that this erosion is not contained; it is setting precedent, normalising impunity, and accelerating a global decline in journalist safety, with UNESCO reporting a 67 per cent increase in deaths in conflict zones in recent years.
In this light, the strike that killed Amal Khalil does not stand alone as an aberration—it sits within an emerging doctrine of war in which the elimination of witnesses risks becoming tacitly permissible. For policymakers, the implication is stark: when the systematic silencing of journalists is absorbed into the background of conflict, the collapse is not only operational but normative, corroding the credibility of the very international order that depends on the visibility of truth.
What is at stake extends beyond individual lives. When journalists are killed, the immediate effect is silence. Stories go untold, evidence goes unrecorded, and accountability becomes more elusive. In conflicts where narratives are fiercely contested, controlling information can be as strategically valuable as controlling territory. Analysts have noted that targeting journalists reflects a shift towards ‘information warfare’, where the aim is not only to defeat an opponent but to shape the story that reaches the outside world.
This dynamic is not unique to Lebanon, but the current context is particularly stark. The perception—widely held in Beirut and increasingly echoed in international circles—is that impunity persists. Despite repeated condemnations from the United Nations, UNESCO, and global NGOs, meaningful accountability remains elusive. The continued military support provided to Israel by key allies, including the United States and several European nations, complicates efforts to enforce compliance with international norms.
It raises uncomfortable questions about whether the so-called rules-based order applies equally to all, or only to those without powerful backers.
For policymakers everywhere, this is no longer a distant or containable crisis but a direct test of the integrity of the international system itself. States that claim fidelity to international law, press freedom and a rules-based order cannot afford the luxury of selective consistency without paying a strategic price.
When the killing of journalists provokes outrage in one theatre yet equivocation in another, the signal sent is not nuance but hierarchy—of whose lives, whose truths, and whose laws matter.
That inconsistency does more than weaken moral authority; it actively erodes deterrence, inviting repetition by those who see that consequences are negotiable. In such an environment, silence is not restraint but complicity, and credibility—once fractured—rarely returns intact.
There is also a strategic dimension. Erosion of international norms does not occur in isolation; it invites replication. If one state can target journalists without consequence, others may follow. The result is a more dangerous world for reporters, and by extension, for anyone who relies on accurate information to make decisions—governments included. Intelligence, diplomacy, and humanitarian response all depend on credible reporting from conflict zones.
The human dimension, however, remains central. Amal Khalil was not a statistic. She was a witness, a storyteller, and a participant in the essential democratic function of informing the public. Her death resonates not only in Lebanon but across a global community of journalists who increasingly find themselves on the front lines. The message her killing sends—to hesitate, to withdraw, to remain silent—is precisely the message that must be resisted.
There are practical steps that can and should be taken. Ceasefire agreements must include explicit protections for journalists and humanitarian workers, with mechanisms for real-time coordination and verification. Independent investigations into alleged violations must be supported, not obstructed. Military aid and cooperation should be conditioned on adherence to international humanitarian law, with clear consequences for breaches. These measures are not radical; they are the minimum required to preserve a semblance of order in war.
Ultimately, the question is not only about legality but about values. The protection of journalists is a proxy for the protection of truth itself. When that protection erodes, so too does the capacity of the international community to respond effectively to crises. Decisions become less informed, debates more polarised, and solutions more elusive.
The killing of Amal Khalil is a warning. It signals that the boundaries of acceptable conduct in war are being tested, and perhaps redrawn. Whether those boundaries hold will depend on the willingness of states—large and small—to insist that they matter. Silence, in this context, is not neutrality. It is acquiescence.
In the end, wars are remembered not only for their outcomes but for the principles they uphold or abandon. The fate of journalists in Lebanon will be one measure of that legacy.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.
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Keir Starmer explains that UK is actively supporting Israel’s genocidal expansion and repeats his previous quotation that he supports Zionism “without qualification”. Keir Starmer said “I said it loud and clear – and meant it – that I support Zionism without qualification.” here: https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/keir-starmer-interview-i-will-work-to-eradicate-antisemitism-from-day-one/Donald Trump calls for help from NATO allies in securing the Straight of Hormuz despite saying on 7 March 2026 that they don’t need people to join wars after they’ve already won. He’s challenged with the claim that he lies as much as the IDF.
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The flowers on the chair, where Halil’s photo, press vest, and helmet were placed, is seen during funeral ceremony for journalist Emel Halil, who was killed in an Israeli military strike targeting the village of Tayri, in Nabatieh, Lebanon on April 23, 2026. [Elif Öztürk – Anadolu Agency]
Lebanon has called on the United Nations to take urgent action to halt Israel’s targeting of journalists, following the reported deaths of 28 media workers since October 2023.
In a letter addressed to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk, Lebanon’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Caroline Ziadeh, raised concerns over what she characterised as repeated attacks on journalists operating in Lebanon.
According to a statement, Ziadeh said the Lebanese Ministry of Information had documented a series of incidents involving Israeli strikes targeting media personnel since early 2023. Among those named were journalist and radio presenter Ghada Dayekh of Sawt Al Farah radio, and Suzanne Khalil, who worked with Al Nour radio and Al Manar TV.
Ziadeh said that Israeli military operations since mid-October 2023 had resulted in the deaths of 28 Lebanese journalists, including reporters and photographers, “without any accountability to date”.
She described the killings as “grave violations of international humanitarian law”, stressing the obligation to protect journalists during armed conflict.
Calling for UN intervention, Ziadeh urged Türk to take steps to reinforce legal protections and support investigations that could lead to accountability. She also called for pressure on Israel to cease such actions and comply fully with its obligations under international law.
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Keir Starmer explains that UK is actively supporting Israel’s genocidal expansion and repeats his previous quotation that he supports Zionism “without qualification”. Keir Starmer said “I said it loud and clear – and meant it – that I support Zionism without qualification.” here: https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/keir-starmer-interview-i-will-work-to-eradicate-antisemitism-from-day-one/Donald Trump calls for help from NATO allies in securing the Straight of Hormuz despite saying on 7 March 2026 that they don’t need people to join wars after they’ve already won. He’s challenged with the claim that he lies as much as the IDF.