The Qatar-headquartered channel aired live footage of Israeli troops entering the office with their weapons drawn and handing a military court order to Ramallah bureau chief Walid al-Omari forcing the bureau to close for 45 days.
The Israeli military said, in response to a Reuters query, that the channel’s offices had been sealed and its equipment confiscated. The military added that the order was signed after an intelligence assessment determined that the offices were being used “to incite terror” and “to support terrorist activities”.
“The channel’s broadcasts endanger the security and public order in both the area and the State of Israel as a whole,” the statement said.
Al Jazeera called the raid “a criminal act” and held the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responsible for the safety of its journalists, it said in a statement.
The network added that it would take legal action to protect its rights and promised to continue its coverage. “Al Jazeera rejects the draconian actions, and the unfounded allegations presented by Israeli authorities to justify these illegal raids,” it said.
Al-Omari said the order he received accused Al Jazeera of “incitement to and support of terrorism” and he said the soldiers confiscated the bureau’s cameras before leaving, Al Jazeera reported.
Israeli communications minister Shlomo Karhi confirmed the closure in a statement that called Al Jazeera “the mouthpiece” of Gaza’s Hamas and Hezbollah. “We will continue to fight in the enemy channels and ensure the safety of our heroic fighters,” he said.
The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate condemned Israel’s move, saying “This arbitrary military decision is considered a new violation against journalistic and media works, which has been exposing the occupation’s crimes against the Palestinian people.”
The Israeli government in May banned Al Jazeera from operating inside Israel, in a move authorized by an Israeli court, and raided a Jerusalem hotel the network used as its office, saying its broadcasts threatened national security.
The network, which says it has no affiliation with militant groups, has provided on-the-ground coverage of Israel’s nearly year-long military offensive in Gaza and of a parallel surge in violence in the West Bank.
Unrest has mounted there since the start of the Gaza conflict, with regular sweeps by Israeli forces that have involved thousands of arrests, regular gun battles between security forces and Palestinian fighters, Palestinian street attacks, and attacks by Jewish settlers on Palestinian communities.
Al Jazeera, which is funded in part by the Qatari government, has previously rejected accusations that it harmed Israel’s security as a “dangerous and ridiculous lie” that puts its journalists at risk.
It has accused Israeli authorities of deliberately targeting and killing several of its journalists, including Samer Abu Daqqa and Hamza Al Dahdooh, who both died in Gaza during the conflict. Israel has said it does not target journalists.
Qatar established Al Jazeera in 1996 and viewed the network as a way to bolster its global profile.
Qatar, along with Egypt and the United States has mediated ceasefire negotiations under which Israel recovered some of those taken hostage on October 7 in a Hamas-led attack on Israel. The internationally-recognized Palestinian Authority exercises limited self-rule in the West Bank under Israeli occupation.