Fox News correspondent Benjamin Hall, who has been covering the war in Ukraine for the past weeks, was hospitalized with wounds sustained on March 14 while reporting on the developments near Kyiv.
This was announced by Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott, as European Pravda reported.
“We have a minimal level of details right now, but Ben is hospitalized and our teams on the ground are working to gather additional information as the situation quickly unfolds,” Suzanne Scott said.
“The safety of our entire team of journalists in Ukraine and the surrounding regions is our top priority and extremely important,” Scott added.
Earlier, Fox News presenter John Roberts reported about the journalist’s injuries during the broadcast, Ukrinform reports.
“A Fox News journalist has been wounded while reporting from near Kyiv,” Roberts said. He added that few details were known about the incident. The channel’s team is trying to learn more.
In the evening of March 14, the Prosecutor General of Ukraine Iryna Venediktova reported that a foreign journalist had received a shrapnel fracture on both legs as a result of shelling by russian troops. She published the journalist’s ID showing the name of Fox News, an American television channel.
According to the Prosecutor General, the journalist is in intensive care at the hospital.
“Fragmentary fracture of the two lower extremities – “russian world” diagnosis made by Ukrainian doctors to a British journalist. The journalist is currently in intensive care under medical supervision. […] Once again, I would like to address our partners: a citizen of your country was on the territory of Ukraine, performing an editorial task. His diagnosis is above. This man was not at the military facility, which, according to russian officials, they are constantly targeting. While not at the military facility, he was seriously injured,” Venediktova wrote.
The information about the crime has been entered into the Unified Register of Pre-trial Investigations (ERDR), and this procedure will be properly investigated, the Prosecutor General said.