Khaleej Times

Journo who reported graft in Hamas ministry appeals against jail term

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gaza city — A Gaza journalist appealed a six-month prison term and fine on Tuesday over her reporting on alleged corruption within the Hamas-run Health Ministry in a case that has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on of the coastal strip’s Islamic rulers.

Hajar Harb reported in 2016 that healthy people were paying doctors to help them circumvent the Israeli-Egyptian blockade by issuing medical referrals to hospitals abroad. She was sentenced and fined later that year and appeared before a Hamas-run court on Tuesday, where the judge postponed her hearing on libel and slander charges until March. “The harassment we face is not solely security. It is physical, psychologi­cal and is affecting our source of income,” she said outside the court complex. “No one knows where things are going in the coming sessions.”

On Monday, Amnesty Internatio­nal called Harb’s prosecutio­n “an outrageous assault on media freedom.”

Journalist­s who gathered outside the court complex called for Harb’s acquittal.

Fathi Sabah, a journalist campaignin­g on her behalf, said the case marks the first time Hamas authoritie­s have sued a journalist

The harassment we face is not solely security. It is physical, psychologi­cal and is affecting our source of income

Hajar Harb, Gaza journalist

for their work since the radical group seized Gaza by force in 2007.

“This is a dangerous indicator of the deteriorat­ing situation of journalist­s in the Gaza Strip,” he said.

Hamas denies the charges levelled in her 2016 report and they sentenced her in absentia while she was receiving cancer treatment in Jordan.

Bakr Turkmani, a lawyer from the Independen­t Commission for Human Rights, said those suspected of misconduct should be tried, not the journalist­s who unveil it.

Last year, Harb was fired from a local media production company after another investigat­ion piece raised suspicion that Hamas authoritie­s gave donated housing units designated for the poor to ineligible beneficiar­ies. “The company claimed the work harmed its relationsh­ip with the factions and the party,” Harb Harb said. —

 ?? AFP ?? Hajar Harb speaks on her mobile phone in front of the courts complex in Gaza City on Tuesday. —
AFP Hajar Harb speaks on her mobile phone in front of the courts complex in Gaza City on Tuesday. —

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