Declan Walsh

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Declan Walsh

Declan Walsh

@declanwalsh

Chief Africa correspondent, @nytimes Ex-Cairo and Islamabad. Author, THE NINE LIVES OF PAKISTAN. U.S. https://t.co/5PjyqeNO43 UK: https://t.co/x9no69KauB Tips: https://t.co/QwfvR4yUG4

Nairobi, Kenya Katılım Şubat 2009
3.4K Takip Edilen148.4K Takipçiler
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Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof@NickKristof·
Critical take from Israel's Foreign Ministry on my column about sexual assaults of Palestinian men, women and children. You can read my piece here through a gift link: nytimes.com/2026/05/11/opi…
Israel Foreign Ministry@IsraelMFA

Today, the @nytimes chose to publish one of the worst blood libels ever to appear in the modern press. In an unfathomable inversion of reality, and through an endless stream of baseless lies, propagandist Nicholas Kristof turns the victim into the accused. Israel - whose citizens were the victims of the most horrific sexual crimes committed by Hamas on October 7, and whose hostages were later subjected to further sexual abuse - is portrayed as the guilty party. This publication is no coincidence. It is part of a false and well-orchestrated anti-Israel campaign aimed at placing Israel on the UN Secretary-General’s blacklist. Israel will fight these lies with the truth - and the truth will prevail.

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Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof@NickKristof·
Here are the photos that won the @nytimesphoto Gaza photographer Saher Alghorra a 2026 @PulitzerPrizes -- taken under impossible, dangerous conditions even as he lacked supplies and even food. The world is in his debt for chronicling conditions in Gaza. nytimes.com/2026/05/04/wor…
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Alex Crawford
Alex Crawford@AlexCrawfordSky·
Read this detailed account from @ZeinakhodrAljaz of the sequence of events leading to the killing of Leb journalist Amal Khalil. Her editors; Leb Pres; Red Cross, were all informed and appealed for help. The Israeli military bombed her shelter anyway then prevented her rescue for hours, attacking the ambulance crews. Targeting journalists and first responders is a heinous breach of int law - no matter their affiliation, no matter it was inside Israeli-occupied land. Leb PM is demanding accountability and calls her killing a ‘blatant war crime’
Zeina Khodr@ZeinakhodrAljaz

The car the journalists were driving behind was hit by an Israeli drone at 2:45 pm killing 2 men inside; Zeinab, Amal took shelter in nearby house; At 2:50pm Amal called her editors, family; President Aoun called on Red Cross, army to rescue them; 4:27pm Israel bombed house

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John Simpson
John Simpson@JohnSimpsonNews·
The body of the Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil was found by rescuers after several hours of digging in the rubble after an Israeli strike. She is the fourth journalist to have been killed by Israeli forces in seven weeks. This is why the word ‘journacide’ is now being used.
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Declan Walsh
Declan Walsh@declanwalsh·
It was "a matter of deep regret" that Mahsa Amini, whose death in 2022 resulted in massive protests, had died in custody for wearing the hijab, he said. "You can't make people believe using force," he said.
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Declan Walsh
Declan Walsh@declanwalsh·
I interviewed Kamal Kharazi in Tehran in July, after the 12-day war. He staunchly defended the regime but also spoke of reforms that reflected its weakness. Women were no longer being forced to wear the hijab, he said, and efforts to impose a dress code on women were "wrong".
Joyce Karam@Joyce_Karam

“While we were engaged in negotiations, they struck us,” #Iran’s Kamal Kharazi told CNN on Mar. 9. Today his home was struck, wife killed, he sustained serious injuries. NYT reports Kharazi was discussing w Pakistan possible US-Iran negotiations w VP Vance

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Salman Masood
Salman Masood@salmanmasood·
Deeply saddened to hear of the passing of John F. Burns, the legendary foreign correspondent of The New York Times. He hired me for the Times in 2002. I had just graduated from university with a degree in International Relations and knew almost nothing about journalism. Burns took me on anyway. In doing so he became, in many ways, my first real teacher in the craft. The Islamabad bureau in late 2001 operated temporarily out of a guesthouse before moving to a larger house the following year. Burns had a reputation for planting bureaus in difficult places and making them work. Watching him build one from the ground up was itself an education. My work at the start was to assist Burns and the other journalists at the bureau. Pull wire reports. Do research. Track down interesting articles. Stack them neatly on his desk. Burns spent most of the day out in the city meeting officials or holding long conversations with sources, mostly over coffee in a hotel lounge. The real work began late at night. He wrote deep into the evening at a desk set up in one corner of the newsroom. I would sit nearby, ready to pass him a document or run a quick search as he shaped his copy. Stories went out in the small hours. One evening, worn down by the long hours, I complained to a colleague, Remy Gerstein. His reply was blunt and memorable, a lesson in itself. "Your time is important. But it is not as important as John's." Burns was meticulous about his work, even his notebooks. He wrote only on one half of each page, leaving the other half blank so he could return later, sometimes years later, to add a thought or a detail. His appearance rarely changed. White shirt. Khakis or pale blue jeans. A green fleece. He insisted on dependable, top-notch equipment and worked on a Sony laptop at a time when Apple machines had not yet broken into the market. He was a wonderful raconteur. Over lunch or dinner he would hold a table for hours with stories about the people and places he had covered. My first reporting trip was with him, to Muridke near Lahore, where a banned militant organization had its headquarters. For someone just entering the profession it felt like stepping straight into the deep current of reporting. His wife, Jane Scott-Long, managed the bureau and kept the operation running with precision. The two soon moved on to set up the Kabul bureau before leaving for Baghdad when the Iraq war began in 2003. His passing comes at a time when the world already feels unsettled. Perhaps that is why the loss feels heavier. Looking back, I realize how fortunate I was to begin my career around journalists of that caliber. The newsroom had an unspoken but palpable competitive energy. Everyone wanted to be the one to win the Pulitzer for their coverage. That tension sharpened the work. John gave me my first break and showed what serious reporting looked like. That early apprenticeship has stayed with me ever since. Rest in peace, John.
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Sky News
Sky News@SkyNews·
@YousraElbagir has been named television journalist of the year at the Royal Television Society awards. Yousra has reported extensively on the war in Sudan over the last year, including an investigation into the "killing fields" where thousands have been targeted.
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Catherine Russell
Catherine Russell@unicefchief·
All of us at UNICEF are devastated and outraged by the killing of our colleague Karine Buisset in a reported drone attack in Goma, DRC. My immediate thoughts are with the family, loved ones & colleagues across UNICEF. Civilians, including aid workers, must never be targeted.
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United Nations Geneva
United Nations Geneva@UNGeneva·
“For decades, vague & overbroad definitions of #terrorism have led to countless human rights violations,” warns independent expert @profbensaul.“These include unlawful killings, arbitrary detentions, enforced disappearances, torture, unfair trials, privacy breaches, refoulement.”
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Al Jazeera English
Al Jazeera English@AJEnglish·
Watch the moment a drone struck Dubai International Airport’s runway, forcing the suspension of all flights on Saturday.
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Malachy Browne
Malachy Browne@malachybrowne·
Official statements placing U.S. forces in the area – along w/ analysis of social posts, videos, sat. images – suggest U.S. forces bombed a school in Minab, Iran during strikes targeting an IRGC base. Over 150 were killed, Iranian officials say. nytimes.com/2026/03/05/wor…
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Malachy Browne
Malachy Browne@malachybrowne·
I reported this story and have been working around the clock since Saturday to cover the deaths and obtain definitive evidence so that we can confidently assign responsibility. We've been reviewing photos of the dust covered bodies of children and verifying their names against the names scrawled on little coffins. We've been debunking false claims about the attack and that the harrowing cemetery photo isn't real. And while it appeared obvious to many early on that the U.S. or Israel hit the school, it takes days to sift through, pinpoint and analyze the evidence. It took four days before a new satellite image we ordered came through so we could confidently assess the damage and the types of weapons used. All that reporting and cross checking and the production of the visuals showing it takes time. But it ultimately allows us to more confidently assert U.S. responsibility, explain our rationale and add to the body of reporting that officials should be challenged with. It's easy to critique a headline, and I agree language matters, but you diminish the reporting. We're not justifying anything, we're stating where the reporting points responsibility, and quoting legal experts on the laws of armed conflict. Here's a gift link nytimes.com/2026/03/05/wor…
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