Published claim files

The World against Israel Case

Evidence archive and research command center for claim files, source chains, public source links, and debunk packs.

Main dossiers first.Component evidence tracks are hidden from the default list so the archive reads as headline dossiers plus evidence modules, not hundreds of disconnected accusations.

Status rule

Verdicts apply to the public accusation; component tracks stay attached below parent dossiers.
bundled claim
DebunkedMisleadingLegally inaccuratePartly supported / context needed
unverifiedAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)10 high-authorityEvidence track
Military / LOAC expertsStrategic / technical reference
Hospitals / health

Hind Rajab: cover‑up vs official denial

The claim argues that Israel’s repeated public denials of involvement in the Hind Rajab incident, combined with the lack of a transparent, public-facing criminal investigation, constitute an intentional cover‑up. It circulates via advocacy groups, documentary reporting, and opinion pieces that reference independent reconstructions contradicting Israeli statements and note no publicly available criminal accountability outcome.

unverifiedAssessment confidence: medium1 pack(s)13 high-authorityEvidence track
Military / LOAC expertsStrategic / technical referenceICJ / state legal record
Famine / aidHospitals / healthMedia / journalists

Hind Rajab: ‘double‑tap’ strike on rescuers near Tel al‑Hawa?

Advocacy groups and several investigations allege that after the family car carrying 6‑year‑old Hind Rajab was hit in Gaza City’s Tel al‑Hawa on January 29, 2024, a clearly marked PRCS ambulance that was dispatched on a coordinated route to rescue her was then struck and the two medics were killed. Avaaz (2026) characterizes this as a deliberate ‘double‑tap’ tactic. PRCS said the ambulance was deliberately targeted. Major media and forensic reconstructions (Washington Post, Sky News, Forensic Architecture) document tanks in the vicinity and damage consistent with tank munitions, but the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said an initial probe indicated no troops were in the area and referred the matter to its Fact‑Finding Assessment (FFA) mechanism. The ‘double‑tap’ label, which implies intent to hit rescuers, is therefore contested.

unverifiedAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)16 high-authorityEvidence track
Military / LOAC expertsCasualty methodologyFact-check / watchdog record
Hospitals / healthMedia / journalistsUN / NGO chainsCasualty data

IDF policy to target journalists in Gaza?

The allegation asserts an intentional IDF policy—stated or implicit—to target journalists in Gaza, often citing unprecedented journalist death tolls and specific strikes on media workers and vehicles. It circulates via broadcaster panels, rights-group briefs, UN expert statements, and investigative features, and is contrasted by official Israeli denials and claims that some deceased ‘journalists’ were combatants or directly participating in hostilities.