Human-in-the-loop AI reshapes newsroom editing White House access dispute sends AP back to court Journalists face new risks and opportunities from X’s location labels X’s location tool exposes propaganda networks Politician booked for threatening journalist in India Malaysia to ban social media for under-16s in 2026 Collector preserves Pakistan cricket history in rare memorabilia book Houthi spying verdict heightens risks for media workers GIJC25 opens in Kuala Lumpur with a call for radical collaboration RFE/RL to close Hungary operations amid funding cuts Human-in-the-loop AI reshapes newsroom editing White House access dispute sends AP back to court Journalists face new risks and opportunities from X’s location labels X’s location tool exposes propaganda networks Politician booked for threatening journalist in India Malaysia to ban social media for under-16s in 2026 Collector preserves Pakistan cricket history in rare memorabilia book Houthi spying verdict heightens risks for media workers GIJC25 opens in Kuala Lumpur with a call for radical collaboration RFE/RL to close Hungary operations amid funding cuts
Logo
Janu
Heavyweights

Israel reporter sentenced over army papers

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 13 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Israel reporter sentenced over army papers

A reporter with Israel's Haaretz newspaper, Uri Blau, was sentenced to four months of community service under a plea bargain for possessing classified military documents, the court said.

 

"I accept the plea bargain reached by the parties, and sentence the accused to a single term of four months' jail which may be served by means of community service... starting from 11 September 2012," wrote Judge Ido Druyan at Tel Aviv Magistrates Court on Monday.

 

He will serve his community service at Reut Medical Centre in Tel Aviv.

 

Blau was convicted at Tel Aviv District Court in July of possessing secret army papers that he received from a former soldier who was subsequently jailed on charges of spying.

 

"This is a very sad day," he told reporters outside the court, in remarks carried by Israeli media.

 

"The prosecution should not have filed an indictment to begin with."

 

As part of the plea bargain, which was agreed with the State Prosecutor's Office on July 5, Blau agreed to admit to the charge of possessing secret information without intending to harm state security.

 

"This is a precedent-setting prosecution of a journalist for doing his job," one of his lawyers, Jack Hen, said at the time, adding that Blau should not have been charged and that all of his reports had been cleared by the military censor.

 

"According to it, the public's right to know and freedom of the press were seriously damaged by the decision to put a journalist on trial for these reasons," he told Haaretz website.

 

Court documents showed that former soldier Anat Kam handed some 1,800 documents to Blau who used some of them as the source for an article in 2008 which said troops had been ordered to carry out targeted killings of Palestinian militants in violation of a Supreme Court order.

 

Blau later handed over all the classified documents in his possession to the security establishment.

 

Kam was sentenced to four and a half years in jail in October 2011 after pleading guilty to leaking the documents.

 

She has said her actions were ideologically motivated and that she wanted to expose the army's policies in the occupied Palestinian territories.- AFP

 

Explore Further

White House access dispute sends AP back to court

White House access dispute sends AP back to court

 November 24, 2025: The Associated Press returns to court challenging White House limits on press access, raising national questions about First Amendment protections and how governments regulate journalists' entry.

Newsroom
Human-in-the-loop AI reshapes newsroom editing

Human-in-the-loop AI reshapes newsroom editing

 November 24, 2025 Newsrooms are testing human-in-the-loop AI editing to boost speed while preserving accuracy, oversight, and trust. Here is how editorial workflows and responsibilities are being redefined in 2025.


Journalists face new risks and opportunities from X’s location labels

Journalists face new risks and opportunities from X’s location labels

 November 24, 2025 Journalists should brace for both safety risks and new verification tools after X’s 'About This Account' feature begins to disclose the location of user accounts.


X’s location tool exposes propaganda networks

X’s location tool exposes propaganda networks

 November 24, 2025 X’s new “About This Account” transparency tool reveals many politically charged accounts running from foreign countries, raising questions about propaganda, anonymity, and platform trust.


Politician booked for threatening journalist in India

Politician booked for threatening journalist in India

 November 24, 2025 A Tamil Nadu politician is booked for allegedly threatening a journalist at a public event, raising concerns over press safety and the growing intimidation of reporters in India.


Malaysia to ban social media for under-16s in 2026

Malaysia to ban social media for under-16s in 2026

 November 24, 2025 Malaysia plans to bar under-16s from social media in 2026, introducing mandatory eKYC age checks for platforms amid debate over privacy, enforcement, and child online safety.


Popular Stories