The findings of a joint probe by several international media outlets highlighted Tuesday how Israel's war on Gaza, where over 100 journalists and media members have so far been killed, committed some of the most flagrant violations of press freedom.
A consortium led by investigative outlet Forbidden Stories and involving around 50 journalists from 13 organizations including AFP, The Guardian and the Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism group (ARIJ) took part in the four-month investigation.
It looked into strikes involving journalists and media infrastructure since Israel launched its devastating offensive in the Gaza Strip in response to the Oct. 7 Hamas incursion.
"More than 100 journalists and media workers have been killed," Forbidden Stories' Laurent Richard said in an editorial accompanying the Gaza Project's publication.
"Today's Gaza journalists have long known that their 'press' vests do not protect them," he wrote.
"Worse still, the protective gear might further expose them."
Carlos Martinez de la Serna, of the Committee to Protect Journalists, expressed shock at the toll.
"This is one of the most flagrant attacks on press freedom that I remember," he told the investigation.
The Israeli military claims it "does not intentionally harm journalists, and that journalists may have been harmed during airstrikes or operational activities aimed at military targets."
"Many of the cases mentioned in the report are actually cases of ... who were killed during military activity, but reported as journalists," it alleged.
The probe found that four journalists were allegedly killed or wounded by a drone while wearing a press vest.
Fourteen in total were killed, wounded, or allegedly targeted while wearing their protective gear describing them as a member of the "press."
At least 40 journalists and media workers were killed while at home in Gaza, it added.
"Whereas the press vest was supposed to identify and protect us according to international laws ... it is now a threat to us," said Basel Khair al-Din, a Palestinian journalist in Gaza who believes he was targeted by a drone strike while wearing a press vest.
ARIJ also surveyed 239 surviving journalists from June 6 to June 16. More than 200 had been displaced from their homes by the war, it found.
Seventy-two said they had lost family members. Of those, 11 reported their own children had been killed.
As part of the probe, AFP looked with other media into a strike on its Gaza bureau on Nov. 2, after its staff had evacuated but while it was still broadcasting a live stream of the war from a camera on its balcony.
They found the strike to likely have been caused by an Israeli tank.
The Israeli military has said the bureau was not targeted but damage to it could have been caused by a "shock wave or shrapnel" from another attack.
AFP global news director, Phil Chetwynd, has called for a "very clear and transparent investigation" from the Israeli authorities into the incident.
He also said that more than 100 journalists and media workers having been killed in the Gaza Strip in such a short time was "completely unacceptable."
"And the thing that worries me most is that it's not causing a scandal. Around the world I don't see the voices of the various governments complaining," he added.
Hamas' incursion on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,195 people, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures. They also seized hostages, 116 of whom remain in Gaza although the army says 42 are dead.
Israel's genocidal response has killed at least 37,626 people, mostly women and children, the Gazan Health Ministry says.
Shuruq Asad, a spokeswoman for the Palestinian Journalist Syndicate (PJS), said more than 70 media offices had been bombed since the start of the war and she too was taken aback by the lack of global outrage.
"I don't think this would be the reaction of the world if there was 100 Ukrainian journalists killed," she said, referring to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.