DaysofPal — Despite mounting evidence and public concern, Britain’s mainstream media have failed to investigate the Royal Air Force’s (RAF) role in more than 500 surveillance flights over Gaza since December 2023 — flights that critics say may be aiding Israel’s military campaign widely condemned as genocidal.
The UK Ministry of Defence claims the Shadow R1 reconnaissance aircraft, operating from RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, are solely tasked with helping locate Israeli hostages taken by Hamas on October 7, 2023. But watchdogs, independent journalists, and pro-Palestinian MPs say this explanation doesn’t hold up — especially as data spikes in British surveillance have reportedly coincided with Israel’s deadliest attacks on the besieged enclave.
Organizations such as Action on Armed Violence (AOAV) have raised urgent questions about the opaque nature of the intelligence gathered and how it is shared. “Once shared with Israel or the United States, Britain loses control of how the data is used,” AOAV warned, citing the risk of complicity in war crimes.
The UK government has consistently refused to disclose how this surveillance data is being handled, even as Gaza faces catastrophic civilian losses, widespread starvation, and destruction of essential infrastructure. More than 56,000 Palestinians — the majority women and children — have been killed since Israel launched its full-scale assault on Gaza in October 2023.
While independent outlets such as Declassified UK, The National, and Middle East Eye have continuously reported on Britain’s intelligence role, major media organizations have remained almost entirely silent. An analysis of 1,359 articles mentioning “Akrotiri” between December 2023 and June 2025 found that not a single mainstream UK media report focused specifically on the Gaza spy flights.
Even during brief moments when RAF operations made headlines — such as after Palestine Action defaced two military planes at RAF Brize Norton, or during Iran’s threats against Akrotiri following Israel’s attack on Tehran in June — coverage failed to scrutinize Britain’s Gaza flights. While the BBC briefly mentioned activists’ claims about British spy planes over Gaza, no follow-up investigations ensued.
This media silence, critics argue, undermines public accountability and enables potential violations of international law to continue unchecked. “There is a glaring public interest in these flights,” said one MP. “The government cannot continue to hide behind vague justifications while evidence mounts that Britain is aiding an illegal war effort.”
Even Google’s AI search overview notes widespread concern about British surveillance over Gaza. Yet this concern remains largely absent from UK front pages — a void that raises serious questions about the independence of British journalism in times of war.
Campaigners are calling for immediate transparency from the UK government and a full parliamentary investigation into Britain’s intelligence role in Gaza — a role that, if left unchecked, may place the UK in direct violation of its legal and moral obligations under international humanitarian law.
Source: Declassified UK
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