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Israel silences more crucial reporting voices from inside Gaza

The targeted killing of Al Jazeera journalist Anas Al-Sharif and four other colleagues by the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) late on Sunday silences more crucial reporting voices from inside Gaza.

The IDF wasted no time in releasing a statement claiming it had "eliminated" Al-Sharif, calling him a "terrorist" who "posed" as a journalist for Al Jazeera. Gaza latest: Follow live updates The Committee to Protect Journalists warned in July that Al-Sharif was the victim of an Israeli smear campaign and that they feared for his safety.

The IDF had previously released documents which they say proved his involvement with Hamas. No word from them on his colleagues - Mohammed Qreiqeh, Ibrahim Zaher, Mohammed Noufal and Moamen Aliwa - who they also killed.

We are chasing. Al-Sharif's death - and that of his four colleagues - is a chilling message to the journalistic community both on the ground and elsewhere ahead of Israel's impending push into Gaza City.

There will now be fewer journalists left to cover that story, and - if it is even possible - they will be that bit more fearful. This is how journalists are silenced.

Israel knows this full well. It has also not allowed international journalists independent access to enter Gaza to report on the war.

Al-Sharif's death has sent shockwaves across the region, where he was a household name. He was prolific on social media and had a huge following.

Read more from Sky News:Journalists demand access to GazaSky News on Israel's 'war on truth'Reporters issue demand to Israel I was watching horrifying footage of the immediate aftermath of the strike in the taxi on my way into the bureau, and the driver told me how he and his family had all cried for Anas when the news came in. His little daughter cried because of Al-Sharif's little daughter, Sham, who she knew from social media.

"They call everyone Hamas," my taxi driver said. "Men, women, children".

Last month, Al-Sharif wrote this post: "I haven't stopped covering [the crisis] for a moment in 21 months, and today I say it outright... and with indescribable pain.

"I am drowning in hunger, trembling in exhaustion and resisting the fainting that follows me every moment… Gaza is dying. And we die with it." This is what journalists in Gaza are facing, every single day..

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