Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil, who works for the daily Al-Akhbar newspaper, reports near a destroyed bridge in Qasmiyeh, Lebanon, Sunday, March 22, 2026. MOHAMMED ZAATARI / AP
An Israeli airstrike killed a Lebanese journalist and wounded another on Wednesday, April 22, while they were working near the border with Israel, according to their employer and rescuers. The civil defense agency's press office said rescuers were "able to recover the body of martyred journalist Amal Khalil, who was killed as a result of a hostile airstrike that targeted a house in the town of al-Tiri". Her employer, the Lebanese daily newspaper Al-Akhbar, also announced her death.
Lebanon's Information Minister Paul Morcos said Khalil "was targeted by the Israeli army while carrying out her professional duty". "The targeting of journalists is a grave crime and a blatant violation of international humanitarian law," he added on X.
The health ministry had earlier said Israeli strikes in al-Tiri had killed two people, wounded journalist Zeinab Faraj – who was taken to hospital – and left Khalil trapped.
A Lebanese Red Cross official had told AFP they had "managed to rescue Zeinab Faraj" but had not reached Khalil and withdrew "because of a warning strike". Ambulance teams escorted by the Lebanese army and accompanied by a bulldozer to remove the rubble had entered the town to search for Khalil, according to journalists in southern Lebanon and local media outlets.








