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Reports have found that the claims in the paper’s “Screams Without Words” article are questionable, if not fabricated.
Dozens of tenured journalism professors at top schools across the U.S. have raised concerns that The New York Times is risking its own credibility, as well as the credibility of journalism at large, with its inaction on an article about sexual violence on October 7 that has come under scrutiny in recent months due to its reliance on questionable — and, in some cases, debunked — evidence.
The story, entitled “‘Screams Without Words’: Sexual Violence on Oct. 7,” was widely circulated after its publication in December and has been used by government officials and Zionist groups to supposedly justify Israel’s genocidal brutality against Palestinians in Gaza.
She never claimed to have been raped. She claims she was sexually harassed.
She claims she was forced at gunpoint to perform a sexual act on her captor. Which is sexual assault.
Which is not rape. Also her claim was she was groped last time I heard it did she change it?
Sexual assault is commonly known as rape.
In the interview, she said she was groped before she was raped.