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July 11, 2026

Union joins fundraiser to feed reporters in Gaza

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Image used in MEAA’s campaign to raise funds for Palestinian journalists PIC Sam Wallman

Photos, footage, audio and news reports from the middle east show nearly everyone in the Gaza is struggling to find food and essential medical supplies, including reporters.

But the demand for their work only intensifies as the war continues.

The Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance [MEAA], which represents many Australian journalists, has joined a global fundraiser to help feed journalists working in the Gaza.

Money raised is to go directly towards fresh vegetables supplies and hygiene kits for around 1200 journalists and their families on contact lists held by the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate.

‘Palestinian journalists are the eyes of the world on Gaza,’ MEAA said in an email sent to members on Friday.

‘These workers continue under fire, without essential needs such as food, water and basic hygiene supplies,’ the email read.

‘The scarcity of these basic necessities in the territory has resulted in a surge in prices, making them unaffordable for many.’

MEAA says each vegetable basket costs about $AUD54 and each hygiene kit costs $AUD77.

More than 100 reporters killed in Gaza since October

News reports from the Gaza are a tradition almost as long as the post-war creation of Israel itself.

But just as medics and aid-workers are complaining of a lack of respect for their work and an inability to carry out first aid owing to hospitals and aid trucks becoming targets of war, so too are journalists being tested to their limits and beyond.

More than a hundred journalists have been killed in Gaza since the Israel Defense Forces started its operation there in October last year, the International Federation for Journalists  [IFJ] reports.

The IFJ has launched the food fundraiser as part of a  solidarity campaign with Palestinian reporters today.

Union backs call for better Israel-Palestine war coverage

MEAA’s appeal comes after the organisation said it had joined more than 80 journalist unions and associations around the world in early November 2023 calling for the Israeli government to ‘take explicit steps to protect the lives of journalists covering the war in Gaza, in accordance with international law’.

All but five of 39 journalists reported as killed on the job in the Gaza at the time were Palestinian.

Later that month, the union said it was endorsing an open letter from a group of Australian journalist members regarding media coverage of the Israel-Palestine conflict.

Reporters on the frontline missing in action

Other examples of recent wars such as in Syria and Yemen have shown what happens when reporters are unable to perform their work effectively.

The UN has said several times in recent years that the subsequent humanitarian crisis in Yemen was the world’s worst, with millions of children said to have died from preventable disease and / or starvation.

Yet there are many Australians who are not aware of the fighting in Yemen largely thanks to a lack of mainstream media coverage.

Meanwhile, reporters hoping to inform the world of atrocities during Syria’s recent military decimation and mass refugee exodus were rarely able to reach the warzone.

Reporters who make it to military frontlines these days seem to be increasingly vulnerable to attack, with Australian ally the United States yet to apologise for a deadly attack on citizens, including two Reuters journalists, in Iraq in 2007.

The alleged war crime was uncovered and relayed via news mastheads around the world thanks to WikiLeaks, with Australian journalist Julian Assange now fighting charges of breaking US espionage laws.



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