Egyptian journalists honour Shireen Abu Akleh's memory with special award

The Egyptian Journalists Syndicate will honor the late Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh with a special category in the Egyptian Press Awards bearing her name.

The award will be based on coverage of Palestine.

Syndicate head Diaa Rashwan said that Abu Akleh’s death had caused an emotional outpouring in the Arab world and around the globe.

The veteran Palestinian journalist, who worked for the Qatari Al-Jazeera network, was covering an Israeli army security operation in Jenin camp when she was shot and killed on May 11.

During an Egyptian Journalists Syndicate memorial service for Abu Akleh at the union’s headquarters, Rashwan promised that a section would be added to the site entrance bearing models of press martyrs, including Abu Akleh.

Egyptian journalists observed a minute’s silence for Abu Akleh during the memorial ceremony, which was attended by Palestine’s Ambassador to Egypt, Diab Al-Louh.

Abu Akleh’s martyrdom will not be forgotten in Arab and international history, Al-Louh said.

He told the Egyptian journalists that “Shireen’s blood will not be in vain.”

The envoy declared “May 11, the day of the martyrdom of the Palestinian journalist, is an international day of solidarity with the Palestinian press.”

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry issued a statement expressing its “condemnation in the strongest terms of the heinous crime of assassination of the late Palestinian journalist and Al-Jazeera correspondent Shireen Abu Akleh.”

Source: Arab News

 

The Liberum

Vox Populi, Vox Dei
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

Mission Impossible Final Reckoning: Too many answers to handle

We’ve all been eagerly awaiting the outcome of the previous instalment of the MI series, […]

Turning threat into opportunity: How ISIS could keep Syria unified

Amid the chaos between the new de facto power in Syria and key sectarian and […]

Pygmalion’s eyeball – Hitchcock and the male gaze, revisited

Disclaimer: It seems I’m going to have to eat some of my words as regards […]

The Politics of Mourning

We remember, therefore we exist. It’s what we tell ourselves to make the unbearable bearable—to […]

The Great Reorientation – Ammar al-Masry’s new pivot strategy

I made a concerted decision not to buy too much SF during the Cairo International […]

Civilisation and its Discontents

Sigmund Freud once observed that a civilisation is built upon the suppression of instinctual drives. One […]