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N.Y. TIMES WRITER QUITS OVER OPEN LETTER ACCUSING ISRAEL OF ‘GENOCIDE’


THE NEWSPAPER SAID AWARD-WINNING JOURNALIST JAZMINE HUGHES RESIGNED AFTER
VIOLATING NEWSROOM POLICY BY SIGNING A PUBLIC STATEMENT PROTESTING ISRAELI
ACTIONS

By Avi Selk
and 
Samantha Chery
November 4, 2023 at 12:55 p.m. EDT

Jazmine Hughes at a panel discussion at Tribeca Film Festival in June 2021, in
New York City. (Noam Galai/Getty Images for Starz)

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The New York Times announced Friday that a writer for its magazine resigned
after violating newsroom policy by signing an open letter that accused Israel of
trying to “conduct genocide against the Palestinian people.”


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Jazmine Hughes, who joined the paper in 2015 and has won multiple national
awards, was one of the most prominent names on a statement published last week
by a group called Writers Against the War on Gaza. It accused Israel of
targeting journalists and killing thousands of Palestinians since Oct. 7, when
the Israeli government declared war on Hamas after the militant group launched a
bloody attack from its base in the Gaza Strip that killed at least 1,400 people
in Israel and took dozens of hostages. The death toll in Gaza since the war
began is approaching 10,000.


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“Israel is an apartheid state, designed to privilege Jewish citizens at the
expense of Palestinians, heedless of the many Jewish people, both in Israel and
across the diaspora, who oppose their own conscription in an ethno-nationalist
project,” read the statement, which specifically criticized a New York Times
editorial that offered qualified support of Israeli reprisal attacks while
imploring the country to protect Palestinian civilians.

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“While I respect that she has strong convictions, this was a clear violation of
The Times’s policy on public protest,” magazine editor Jake Silverstein wrote in
an email to staff Friday evening. “This policy, which I fully support, is an
important part of our commitment to independence.”

Silverstein said Hughes also violated the policy earlier in the year, when she
signed an open letter protesting the Times’s coverage of transgender issues.
“She and I discussed that her desire to stake out this kind of public position
and join in public protests isn’t compatible with being a journalist at The
Times, and we both came to the conclusion that she should resign,” he wrote in
the email.

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Hughes didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment Saturday morning. The
Times declined to comment beyond Silverstein’s email.

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Hughes has won a string of accolades while working as a writer and editor at the
Times, including a National Magazine Award in March for profiles on Viola Davis
and Whoopi Goldberg. Forbes named her one of its top “30 under 30” journalists
several years earlier, in part for her work to help diversify her newsroom.

She was prominently involved in criticizing her newspaper’s op-ed desk in 2020,
after it published a column by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) urging the military to
enter U.S. cities. The paper later said that column failed to meet its
standards, and the incident helped push editorial page editor James Bennet out
of the company.

The Israel-Gaza war has forced many institutions to contend with members who
feel strongly about the conflict, which involves a long history of Israel
occupation and deadly military reprisals on Palestinian territory.

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Journalists at various news outlets have quit or been fired in connection with
reporting and comments on the Israel-Gaza war.

David Velasco was ousted as editor in chief at Artforum after the arts
publication posted an open letter that supported Palestinian liberation and
called for a cease-fire. The letter led to several staffers quitting in protest,
Vanity Fair reported.

Two BBC reporters resigned last month over disagreements with its war coverage.
Noah Abrahams quit after the network failed to call Hamas a terrorist
organization. And Bassam Bounenni resigned from his role as a North Africa
correspondent, “as required by my professional conscience,” he said on X,
formerly Twitter.

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