Israeli Soldiers Choke CNN Photojournalist During West Bank Detention
A CNN journalist was wrestled into a chokehold by Israeli soldiers as they detained an entire news crew in the West Bank. Photojournalist Cyril Theophilos was forced to the ground during a violent confrontation with members of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on Friday. The crew were interviewing Palestinians who had allegedly been attacked by Israeli settlers near the town of Tayasir when they were approached by the IDF. Soldiers brandished their weapons, pointing them directly at the news crew and ordering them to stop interviewing, video showed.
'Stop! Sit down! Sit down,' one soldier reportedly yelled, approaching the news team as well as two young boys a few feet in front of them. 'The soldiers just immediately came up and started pointing their weapons directly at us telling everyone to sit down immediately,' Jerusalem correspondent Jeremy Diamond told the camera. As the team tried to record the situation, one soldier smacked Diamond's phone out of his hand and demanded that the crew's cameras were switched off. Theophilos was then placed in a chokehold. Footage saw the journalist pointing the camera up at the soldiers, who were then towering over him after he was taken to the ground. His camera was allegedly damaged during the incident.
A CNN news crew were approached by armed Israeli soldiers while interviewing Palestinians in the West Bank town of Tayasir. Then Cyril Theophilos, a photojournalist for the outlet seen above, was held in a chokehold by one of the armed soldiers and then brought to the ground. As the crew tried to record the situation, one soldier smacked one of the crew's phones out of his hand and demanded that their camera was switched off.

The team and the Palestinians were reportedly detained for two hours before the news crew was escorted back to their vehicle. The Israeli Military told CNN that the incident would be 'thoroughly reviewed.' 'The actions and behavior of the soldiers in the incident are incompatible with what is expected of IDF (Israel Defense Forces) soldiers operating in the Judea and Samaria area,' a spokesperson said. The news team had been in the area interviewing Palestinians who had been reportedly attacked by Israeli civilians or 'settlers.'
The rise in settler attacks on Palestinian villages along the West Bank, which are not always violent, coincide with the government continuing to expand settlements. Locals in Tayasir said that the settler attack on Thursday morning saw 75-year-old Abdullah Daraghmeh left with a fractured face and skull as well as knocked out teeth. His family told CNN that settlers stormed in and beat Daraghmeh, with his son Sami Daraghmeh saying that his father had been asleep. 'This is not normal,' he added.
'The soldiers just immediately came up and started pointing their weapons directly at us telling everyone to sit down immediately,' correspondent Jeremy Diamond told the camera. According to locals, the settlers had arrived in the early hours and began firing guns into the air and beating Palestinians before the new outpost was established by sunrise. During the two hours that the CNN news crew were detained by the Israeli soldiers, the team reportedly heard the soldiers' opinions on the controversial tactic.
An Israeli soldier, identified as Meir, acknowledged that the outpost he was protecting was illegal under Israeli law. 'But this will be a legal settlement,' he said. 'Slowly, slowly.' He was asked if he would help make the legality of the outposts a reality, Meir said: 'Of course. I help my people.' Meir reportedly said that the tactic involved the establishment of outposts on Palestinian villages while relying on little response from the Israeli soldiers and the eventual legalization from the Israeli government.

Currently, dozens of similar outposts have been legalized by the Israel government since Hamas's attack on October 7 in 2023. According to the CNN news team, the group of soldiers spoke of seeking revenge over the death of Yehuda Sherman, 18, who was said to have been killed by a Palestinian driving an ATV on Sunday March 22. Palestinians in the area said that the young man had been stealing sheep from locals. 'If you had a brother and they killed him, what would you have done?' one soldier asked the news crew. 'So, that's revenge?' the CNN team asked. 'Revenge,' Meir said. 'Listen, at the end of the day, if the state doesn't address what they did — those who murdered the youth...

what do you expect us to do? the numbers are stark, but they tell only part of the story. the un office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs has confirmed 25 palestinian deaths at the hands of israeli settlers and soldiers by march 15. yet behind each statistic lies a human tragedy, a family fractured, a community left to pick up the pieces. how does one measure the cost of such violence?
the report comes amid a growing humanitarian crisis. aid workers describe a landscape where trust is eroded, where every step into a village feels like walking a minefield. local leaders speak of fear, not just from the immediate threat of violence but from the long-term consequences of displacement and economic collapse. what happens when a generation grows up knowing only the shadow of war?
limited access to information complicates the picture. while the un relies on verified reports, many incidents go unrecorded. witnesses may fear retaliation, and communication lines are often severed. how can the world respond when the full scope of suffering remains hidden?

international reactions are split. some governments call for immediate ceasefires, while others warn of unintended consequences. diplomats meet behind closed doors, but the voices of the affected remain absent from the debate. is diplomacy enough, or does it risk becoming another layer of bureaucracy?
the palestinian dead are not faceless numbers. they are teachers, parents, children. their stories are scattered across refugee camps and hospitals, in the silence of families who have lost too much. what does it mean to mourn in a world that seems to have forgotten how to listen?
as the un continues its work, the question lingers: who will hold those responsible accountable? the answer may lie not in distant capitals but in the courage of those who refuse to let their pain be ignored.
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