OZAN KOSE/AFP via Getty Images
Summary List PlacementA Palestinian-American journalistĀ said Twitter asked her to delete some tweets while she was reporting live from the West Bank.
Mariam Barghouti toldĀ Motherboard that Twitter asked her to remove some tweets.
"To be frank I'm not sure which tweets, I was at a demonstration being chased by Israeli military jeeps along with hundreds of Palestinians near Ramallah," she told Motherboard.
Barghouti's account was also temporarily restricted on Tuesday. Barghouti posted to her Instagram Story screenshots of a message from Twitter saying that she had violated the company's media policy.
According to Motherboard, Barghouti had been on the ground covering protests against the planned evictions of Palestinians in East Jerusalem. The expulsions stoked longstanding tensions between Israel and Hamas, the Gaza militant group. On Monday and Tuesday, Israeli forces carried out airstrikes in Palestinian territories, and Hamas fired rockets at Israeli cities.
Twitter later told Motherboard that her account was restricted by accident.
"We took enforcement action on the account you referenced in error. That has since been reversed," a Twitter spokesperson said.
In an Instagram Story, Barghouti said in response: "Twitter said it was a mistake. I think I just have more visibility than other accounts."
This is what her account looked like while restricted:
Tweet Embed://twitter.com/mims/statuses/1392235369614163976?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
ive been on twitter what feels like my entire life and ive never seen before what they're doing to this palestinian journalist's account pic.twitter.com/z6bSmLCvNn
According to Motherboard, she had tweeted shortly before her account was restricted: "I feel like I'm in a war zone in Beit El. Israeli keeps just went full forces with hundreds of teargas canisters shot."
NOW WATCH: How JFK customs searches 1 million packages a day for illegal items
See Also:
- Video shows Iron Dome interceptors filling the sky as more than 100 rockets rain down on Israel
- Video shows a US Navy haul of illegal weapons so big that the rifles, machine guns, and RPGs covered the deck of a missile cruiser
- A hacker group linked to the pipeline attack that knocked out much of the East Coat's fuel supply claims to have a code of conduct forbidding attacks on some targets