Three weeks ago, I got the news in Cairo on my mobile phone before it was aired on Al-Jazeera.
A notification popped up on my iPhone screen, making me rush to tune back into the Al-Jazeera TV channel after having turned it off.
The TV had been on since early morning, as the whole family was following the news of Ismail Haniyah’s assassination in Tehran. No one expected anything significant to happen on the same day.
"Al-Jazeera correspondent in North Gaza Ismail Al-Ghoul is killed in an Israeli airstrike," read the notification, which had come directly from one of the on-ground Gaza Telegram groups.
I quickly turned on Al-Jazeera's Arabic channel and found the presenter, Rola Ibrahim, speaking live with guests from Tehran and the West Bank about the impact of Haniyah’s assassination on the war in Gaza.
Ismail Al-Ghoul and Ramy El-Rifi |
Meanwhile, the news spread rapidly on social media, with reporters and photographers sharing updates online. Al Jazeera correspondent Anas Al-Sherif confirmed the news on Twitter.
#عاجل | استشهاد أخي وحبيبي مراسل #الجزيرة إسماعيل الغول والمصور رامي الريفي بقصف إسرائيلي استهدفهما في مدينة غزة pic.twitter.com/1ImGMLAOhn
— أنس الشريف Anas Al-Sharif (@AnasAlSharif0) July 31, 2024
“**Breaking News**: My brother and beloved Al Jazeera correspondent Ismail Al-Ghoul, along with photographer Rami Al-Rifi, were martyred in an Israeli airstrike that targeted them in Gaza City,”