May 20, 2024
In 2023, the
Israeli military censor barred the publication of 613 articles by media outlets
in Israel, setting a new record for the period since +972 Magazine began
collecting data in 2011. The censor also redacted parts of a further 2,703
articles, representing the highest figure since 2014. In all, the military
prevented information from being made public an average of nine times a day.
This censorship
data was provided by the military censor in response to a freedom of
information request submitted by +972 Magazine and the Movement for Freedom of
Information in Israel.
Israeli law
requires all journalists working inside Israel or for an Israeli publication to
submit any article dealing with “security issues” to the military censor for
review prior to publication, in line with the “emergency regulations” enacted
following Israel’s founding, and which remain in place. These regulations allow
the censor to fully or partially redact articles submitted to it, as well as
those already published without its review. No other self-proclaimed “Western
democracy” operates a similar institution.
To prevent
arbitrary or political interference, the High Court ruled in 1989 that the
censor is only permitted to intervene when there is a “near certainty that real
damage will be caused to the security of the state” by an article’s
publication. Nonetheless, the censor’s definition of “security issues” is very
broad, detailed across six densely-filled pages of sub-topics concerning the
army, intelligence agencies, arms deals, administrative detainees, aspects of
Israel’s foreign affairs, and more. Early on in the war, the censor distributed
more specific guidance regarding which kinds of news items must be submitted
for review before publication, as revealed by The Intercept.
Submissions to
the censor are made at the discretion of a publication’s editors, and media
outlets are prohibited from revealing the censor’s interference — by marking
where an article has been redacted, for instance — which leaves most of its
activity in the shadows. The censor has the authority to indict journalists and
fine, suspend, shut down, or even file criminal charges against media
organizations. There are no known cases of such activity in recent years,
however, and our request to the censor to specify its indictments filed in the
past year was not answered.
For more
background on the Israeli military censor and +972’s stance toward it, you can
read the letter we published to our readers in 2016.
Graphic showing number of articles redacted by the Israeli military censor from 2011 to 2023. (+972/Local Call)
“Information
pertaining to censorship is of particularly high importance, especially in
times of emergency,” attorney Or Sadan of the Movement for Freedom of
Information told +972. “During the war, we have [witnessed] the large gaps
between Israeli and international media outlets, as well as between the
traditional media and social media. Although it is obvious that there is
information that cannot be disclosed to the public in times of emergency, it is
appropriate for the public to be aware of the scope of information hidden from
it.
“The
significance of such censorship is clear: there is a great deal of information
that journalists have seen fit to publish, recognizing its importance to the
public, that the censor chose not to allow,” Sadan continued. “We hope and
believe that the exposure of these numbers, year after year, will create some
deterrence against the unchecked use of this tool.”
A wartime trend
Although the
censor refused our request to provide a breakdown of its censorship figures by
month, media outlet, and grounds for interference, it is clear that the reason
for last year’s spike is the Hamas-led October 7 attack and the ensuing Israeli
bombardment of Gaza. The only year for which there was a comparable level of
silencing was 2014, when Israel launched what was then its largest assault on
the Strip; that year, the censor intervened in more articles (3,122) but
disqualified slightly fewer (597) than in 2023.
Last year, the
censor’s representatives also made in-person visits to news studios, as has
previously occurred during periods in which the government has declared a state
of emergency, and continued monitoring the media and social networks for
censorship violations. The censor declined to detail the extent of its
involvement in television production and the number of retroactive
interventions it made in regard to previously published news articles.
We do know,
however, thanks to information revealed by The Seventh Eye, that despite the
Israeli media’s proactive compliance — the number of submissions to the censor
nearly doubled last year to 10,527 — the censor identified an additional 3,415
news items containing information that should have been submitted for review,
and 414 that were published in violation of its orders.
Graphic showing number of articles sent to the Israeli military censor from 2011 to 2023. (+972/Local Call)
Even before the
war, the Israeli government had advanced a series of measures to undermine
media independence. This led to Israel dropping 11 places in the 2023 annual
World Press Freedom Index, followed by an additional four places in 2024 (it
now sits in 101st place out of 180).
Since October,
press freedom in Israel has further deteriorated, and the censor has found
itself in the crosshairs of political battles. According to reports by Israel’s
public broadcaster, Kan, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed for a new law
that would force the censor to ban news items more widely, and even suggested
that journalists who publish reports on the security cabinet without the
approval of the censor should be arrested. The chief military censor, Major
General Kobi Mandelblit, also claimed that Netanyahu had pressured him to
expand media censorship, even in cases that lacked any security justification.
In other cases,
the Israeli government’s crackdown on media has skirted the censor and its
activities entirely. Back in November, Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi
banned Al-Mayadeen from being broadcast on Israeli TV, and in April, the
Knesset passed a law to ban the activities of foreign media outlets at the
recommendation of security agencies. The government implemented the law earlier
this month when the cabinet unanimously voted to shut down Al Jazeera in
Israel, and the ban will now reportedly also be extended to the West Bank. The
state claims that the Qatari channel poses a danger to state security and
collaborates with Hamas, which the channel rejects.
The decision
will not affect Al Jazeera’s operations outside of Israel, nor will it prevent
interviews with Israelis via Zoom (full disclosure: this writer sometimes
interviews with Al Jazeera via Zoom), and Israelis can still access the channel
via VPN and satellite dishes. But Al Jazeera journalists will no longer be able
to report from inside Israel, which will reduce the channel’s ability to
highlight Israeli voices in its coverage.
The Association
for Civil Rights in Israel and Al Jazeera petitioned the High Court against the
decision, and the Journalists’ Union also issued a statement against the
government’s decision (full disclosure: this writer is a member of the union’s
board).
Despite these
various attacks on the media, the most significant threats posed by the Israeli
government and military, and especially during the war, are those faced by
Palestinians journalists. Figures for the number of Palestinian journalists in
Gaza killed by Israeli attacks since October 7 range from 100 (according to the
Committee for the Protection of Journalists) to more than 130 (according to the
Palestinian Journalists Syndicate). Four Israeli journalists were killed in the
October 7 attacks.
The heightened
government interference in Israeli media does not absolve the mainstream press
of its failure to report on the army’s campaign of destruction in Gaza. The
military censor does not prevent Israeli publications from describing the war’s
consequences for Palestinian civilians in Gaza, or from featuring the work of
Palestinian reporters inside the Strip. The choice to deny the Israeli public
the images, voices, and stories of hundreds of thousands of bereaved families,
orphans, wounded, homeless, and starving people is one that Israeli journalists
make themselves.
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