The Arab broadcaster Al Jazeera has published the most comprehensive documentary to date, mapping and exposing war crimes that have taken place in Gaza during the year-long conflict, which has so far killed 41,788 people, including 16,500 children.
Among other things, it reveals that the Israeli military, the IDF, used AI technology to select targets to be bombed faster than would have been humanly possible.
The documentary Investigating war crimes in Gaza, published by the Al Jazeera Investigations Unit, exposes Israeli war crimes in the Gaza Strip through photos and videos posted online by Israeli soldiers during the year-long conflict.
The documentary’s investigators have built a database of thousands of videos, photos and social media posts and identified many of the soldiers who appear to have committed serious war crimes.
The footage reveals a range of illegal activities, from ruthless destruction such as the systematic demolition of empty homes and looting, to the demolition of entire neighbourhoods and deliberate killings of civilians.
The documentary also tells the story of the war through the eyes of Palestinian journalists, human rights workers and ordinary residents of the Gaza Strip. It also reveals the complicity of Western governments.
“The West cannot hide, they cannot claim ignorance. No one can say they didn’t know”, says Palestinian writer Susan Abulhawa in the documentary.
This is “the first live-streamed genocide in history. If people are ignorant, it is intentional”, she says.
About Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera is an international news channel founded in 1996 in Doha, Qatar, and owned by the state-owned Al Jazeera Media Network. The channel broadcasts news, documentaries and analysis focusing on global and regional events, particularly from the Middle East. The channel was originally broadcast in Arabic, but has since expanded to include Al Jazeera English and several other regional channels. Al Jazeera is known for its independent reporting, especially from conflict zones such as Afghanistan and Iraq. Although the channel has received recognition and several international awards for its journalism, it has also been the subject of controversy and accusations of political bias, especially from some governments.