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Mourners gather around the coffin of Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV correspondent Ali Shoeib during the funeral of Shoeib, Al-Mayadeen TV reporter Fatima Ftouni and cameraman Mohammed Ftouni, at a temporary cemetery in Dahiyeh, Beirut. Alamy Stock Photo

Funerals held in Lebanon for three journalists killed by Israeli strike

Ali Shoeib, Fatima Ftouni and her brother Mohammad Ftouni were all killed when their vehicle was hit in Jezzine.

THE FUNERALS OF three journalists killed by an Israeli strike on southern Lebanon have taken place.

Ali Shoeib, a veteran correspondent for Hezbollah’s Al Manar TV, Fatima Ftouni of Al Mayadeen, seen as close to the Iran-backed movement, and her brother, cameraman Mohammad Ftouni, were all killed when their vehicle was hit in Jezzine.

In a statement, Israel’s military alleged without providing evidence that Shoeib “operated within the Hezbollah terrorist organisation under the guise of a journalist for the Al Manar network”.

It did not comment on the deaths of Ftouni and her brother.

Lebanon was pulled into the US-Israel-Iran conflict when Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel on 2 March in revenge for the killing of Iran’s supreme leader in the opening salvo of the war.

Israel responded with large-scale airstrikes across Lebanon and a ground offensive in the south. Lebanese authorities say at least 1,189 people have been killed since the hostilities broke out.

a-woman-holds-a-poster-showing-hezbollahs-al-manar-tv-correspondent-ali-shoeib-center-al-mayadeen-tv-reporter-fatima-ftouni-left-and-cameraman-ali-ftouni-during-their-funeral-at-a-temporary-cemet A woman holds a poster showing Ali Shoeib, Fatima Ftouni and Mohammad Ftouni during their funeral at a temporary cemetery in Dahiyeh. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Many Hezbollah flags were in evidence at the funeral in a temporary cemetery in Dahiyeh in Beirut’s southern suburbs, where the group holds sway.

AFP correspondents said hundreds of people attended the funeral, and the bodies of Shoeib and Fatima Ftouni were draped in their channels’ logos and with bouquets of flowers.

“Fatima and Ali were heroes,” a relative of Ftouni’s who gave only his first name as Qassem told AFP.

“We will continue on this path, on this journey, even if we all become martyrs.”

Ali Hashem, who had been close to Shoeib, said “losing them is very difficult”, but “we will not be broken”.

‘Blatant crime’

Lebanon’s president Joseph Aoun condemned the killings as “a blatant crime”.

mourners-gather-during-the-funeral-of-hezbollahs-al-manar-tv-correspondent-ali-shoeib-al-mayadeen-tv-reporter-fatima-ftouni-and-cameraman-ali-ftouni-who-were-killed-saturday-in-an-israeli-airstrike Mourners gathered during the funerals. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot told public broadcaster France 3 today that journalists working in war zones “must never be targeted, including when they “have links with parties to the conflict”.

“If it is indeed confirmed that the journalists in question were deliberately targeted by the Israeli army, then this is extremely serious and a blatant violation of international law,” Barrot said.

Since the start of the previous hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah in 2023, which a November 2024 ceasefire sought to end, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has documented at least 11 Lebanese journalists and press workers killed by Israel.

Some 210 Palestinian journalists and media workers have been killed by the Israeli military in Gaza, the CPJ said.

The CPJ has said that the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) has committed more targeted killings of journalists than any other government’s military since the CPJ began documenting journalists’ deaths in 1992.

It has called on international authorities to ensure that all cases of targeted killings of the press are “independently and impartially investigated as war crimes”.

 © AFP 2026 

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