
"Shelters are no longer safe"... An Indian journalist reveals Israeli censorship of the Iranian strikes.
Censorship and shelter safety report
Indian journalist Braj Mohan Singh, returning from Israel, recorded a video describing strict military censorship and saying that 'shelters are no longer safe.'
“An Indian journalist returning from Israel sparked widespread reaction on social media after speaking about the strict military censorship that Tel Aviv imposes on coverage of events, as the bombardment between Iran and Israel intensifies”
He said Iranian missiles sometimes strike without sirens and that some civilians died inside shelters despite repeated government assurances that they provide protection.

Mohan Singh explained that 'the government will not tell you anything, and you cannot visit hospitals that contain bodies, and when an incident happens, we do not even know where it occurred.'
He alleged that Israeli authorities prevented filming the destruction and downplayed media coverage of the damage caused by Iranian attacks.
Alleged Israeli censorship
The video spread widely on social media and prompted activists and bloggers to call it conclusive evidence of Israeli censorship.
Tweeters argued Israel conceals the scale of damage and losses to control local public opinion and preserve stability.

Bloggers framed the policy as systematic psychological warfare and a long-term strategy to manage the conflict domestically before it becomes an international public-opinion issue.
Other bloggers noted that NBC documented during a live broadcast the fall of an Iranian missile on Tel Aviv but, they say, no information was published about the impact location or extent of damage.
They added there are no videos available amid what they describe as stringent Israeli military censorship aimed at controlling information.
Beit Shemesh strike report
Al Jazeera Net's Open-Source Unit monitored aerial images from Israeli news platforms said to be not subject to military censorship and located a missile strike on a residential complex.
“An Indian journalist returning from Israel sparked widespread reaction on social media after speaking about the strict military censorship that Tel Aviv imposes on coverage of events, as the bombardment between Iran and Israel intensifies”
The unit reported the missile struck one of the shelters directly and caused widespread destruction that reached neighboring houses.
Israeli newspapers and media carried dozens of testimonies from Beit Shemesh residents who expressed shock at the power of the Iranian strike and the scale of human and material losses.
A debate arose over whether early-warning alarms were activated: the army said the alarms had been activated, while some testimonies indicated residents did not have enough time to move to protected places, a direct contradiction among the sources.
Claims and sourcing summary
The article places these reports in the broader context of open hostilities, saying that since February 28 Israel and the United States have been waging a war on Iran, which it says has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of Iranians, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and senior security officials, and that Tehran responds to Tel Aviv by carrying out attacks with missiles and drones.
If any details above are unclear in the source, the article does not provide independent verification beyond the cited videos, social-media reactions, Open-Source Unit analysis, and testimonies.

Key Takeaways
- Indian journalist Braj Mohan Singh reported strict military censorship Tel Aviv imposes on coverage
- His revelations sparked widespread reaction on social media
- He said civilians suffered even in places the government described as safe
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