All decent people were horrified by reports from Israel this week that Hamas terrorists beheaded babies during a bloody rampage through the county that sparked a war. For some journalists, though, the horror was not that the Israeli babies were slaughtered but that the accounts of the killings might make Islamist terrorists look bad.
Reporters at prominent news outlets warned that claims the Palestinian barbarians beheaded the babies they undeniably killed lacked sufficient confirmation. The “disinformation” could play into “Islamophobic” stereotypes about terrorists and put Palestinian lives at risk, they said, echoing pervasive anti-Israel media bias in coverage of the conflict.
Snopes, Oct. 13: “Were Israeli Babies Beheaded by Hamas Militants During Attack on Kfar Aza?”:
As violence escalated in Israel and Palestine in early October 2023, politicians, news media, and activists in the U.S. and U.K. spread a rumor about Hamas fighters supposedly beheading as many as 40 Israeli infants. As we looked into the claim, we found contradictory reports from journalists, Israeli army officials, and almost no independent corroborations of the alleged war crime, leading to concerns among fact-checkers that such a claim may be premature or unsubstantiated. …
People should be wary of claims that echo Islamophobic rhetoric, or statements that compare the violence in Kfar Aza to “ISIS-style” killings—i.e., beheadings that have taken place in a different context and were committed by a different group. Such rumors that emphasize specific, unverified acts of brutality against infants and that attempt to connect them to patterns of violence carried out by unconnected Islamist groups have the potential to become dangerous propaganda.
As the IDF says it does not ‘have time” to confirm the reports of beheaded babies, the level of misinformation around events in Israel ‘seems near unprecedented.”
Yesterday the Israeli Prime Minister’s office said that it had confirmed Hamas beheaded babies & children while we were live on the air. The Israeli government now says today it CANNOT confirm babies were beheaded. I needed to be more careful with my words and I am sorry. https://t.co/Yrc68znS1S
A series of shocking reports have spread horrific claims of baby beheadings by Hamas militants across social and mainstream media in recent days. But the reports are unconfirmed, and in some cases have been retracted. https://t.co/R5IwE0mJx1
The story about babies being beheaded at Kfar Aza is based on one live report by one Israeli reporter and has not been corroborated by officials but it has been reported as fact around the world by experienced journalists who should know better. #gaza
The Israeli army has now said it has no information to confirm that ‘Hamas beheaded babies”. These baseless claims, which seem to have originated from the army itself, have been repeated by US officials & the likes of @CNN /1 https://t.co/RIICuZdxBN
The media were not alone in denying the beheadings.
“The Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas has strongly dismissed the false claims promoted by some Western media outlets, such as Palestinian freedom fighters killing children and targeting civilians,” Hamas said Wednesday on its Telegram channel.
Hamas posted a video on Telegram Thursday that appears to show its members abducting an infant and a toddler from Holit, one of the southern Israeli border towns the Iran-backed terrorist group overran last weekend. The caption describes the terrorists as “showing compassion for children.”
The facts: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office released Thursday what it described as “horrifying photos of babies murdered and burned by the Hamas monsters.”
Children, women, and the elderly were among some 1,300 people killed and 200 taken hostage by Hamas, including a number of Americans. Much of Hamas’s barbarity was documented in gory videos that the Iran-backed terrorist group posted online.
Israel has declined to officially confirm that babies were beheaded, and the Israeli military spokesperson’s office did not respond Friday to the Washington Free Beacon‘s request for comment. But an Israeli military spokeswoman and areporter at Israel’s i24 News separately this week said that soldiers told them of seeing children and babies beheaded at Kfar Aza, another terrorized community near the border of the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.
Yossi Landau, the head of operations for the southern region of Zaka, a volunteer emergency response group in Israel, told CBS News on Wednesday that he saw with his own eyes children and babies who had been beheaded.
“I saw a lot more that cannot be described for now,” he added, speaking of bodies of parents and children that showed clear signs of torture, “because it’s very hard to describe.”