Israel's war with the Palestinian movement Hamas became the deadliest event for correspondents covering conflicts, said the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). "As of November 2, among the 10,000 people killed since the start of the war on October 7, at least 36 were journalists and media workers," the organization said in a statement reported by the Sputnik news agency. The report came shortly after it was reported that Palestine TV journalist Mohamed Abu Hatab died on Thursday night along with 11 members of his family after a bombing by the Israeli Army against the city of Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, announced the Palestinian news agency Wafa, cited by Europa Press. Abu Hatab had been working live just an hour before his death, and with him there are now four journalists from the network who have died in the bombings that began after the bloody attack carried out by the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas on October 7. in Israeli territory, and which left some 1,400 dead and 240 hostages. The latest official report from Hamas authorities put at least 9,061 Palestinians dead and around 32,000 injured in three and a half weeks of Israeli bombing, including 3,760 minors and 2,326 women. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), together with more than 70 journalists' associations and unions around the world, on Thursday demanded that Israel take measures to protect the lives of press workers covering the war in Gaza, according to with international law, the organization reported on its website. "The number of media workers who have lost their lives in three weeks of conflict is unprecedented," said a statement, which called on the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to "rigorously follow international law that requires "that combatants take all reasonable measures to treat journalists as civilians and safeguard their lives."