Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Abu Jayyab"


3 mentions found


A video showing the aftermath of the strike that killed Shahed captured her sprawled on the ground next to her friends, her pink pants impossible to miss. Every time she came in, she said, ‘Mom.’ I would say, ‘My soul, my soul,’” Awda Talla told CNN. An analysis of the site of the attack, documented by a freelance journalist working for CNN in Gaza, paints a very different picture of Israeli military responsibility. Israeli military’s shifting responseCNN has pressed the Israeli military for details about the strike, which took place on April 16 at about 3:40 p.m., according to video evidence. The Israeli military declined to provide any additional evidence to back up its claims.
Persons: Mona Awda Talla, Shahed, Awda Talla, , Chris Cobb, Smith, It’s, ” Cobb, , Shahed’s, Chris Lincoln, Jones, Cobb, , Maghazi, ” Mahmoud Beha Abdel Lattif, I’m, , , ” Sama, Ahmed Abu Jayyab Organizations: CNN, , British Army, CNN CNN, Artillery, Armament Research Services, Israel Defense Forces, IDF Locations: Gaza’s Al, Gaza, Israel, Israeli, Shahed, British, Al, Aqsa
Mr. Abu Jayyab said the strike hit less than 10 meters from where the children were playing. Mr. Abu Jayyab said Luji had been eager to meet the new baby that her parents, Mr. Abu Jayyab’s brother and sister-in-law, were expecting. In his grief, Luji’s father decided they would name the baby after her, Mr. Abu Jayyab said. “Doctors say he needs a miracle to survive, and we should prepare ourselves for the bad news,” Mr. Abu Jayyab said in a phone interview. Two of the girls’ cousins, 15-year-old Ahmed and 18-year-old Abdullah, as well as a 60-year-old neighbor were also killed in the strike, Mr. Abu Jayyab said.
Persons: Abu, Yousef Abu Jayyab, Abu Jayyab, , Abdel Kareem Hana, Luji, Abu Jayyab’s, Luji’s, Mila, Ahmed, ” Mr, Abdullah, Aric Toler Organizations: Palestinian, The New York Times, Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, Associated Press, United Nations Locations: Gaza, Israeli, Al Aqsa, Credit
GAZA, April 28 (Reuters) - The armed wing of the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas said on Thursday it would stop receiving fundraising via the crypto currency bitcoin, a method it has used for years, citing an increase in "hostile" activity against donors. Hamas had endorsed crypto as a fundraising method for years, previously developing sophisticated tactics to solicit bitcoin donations. Iran has also always been a major financial and military backer of the group, according to officials from both sides. Hamas is designated a terrorist organization by the United States, Britain and the European Union. In 2020, the U.S. broke up efforts by the military wing of Hamas, al-Qaeda and Islamic State to raise funds via cryptocurrency, seizing some $2 million worth of crypto.
Total: 3