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LINVILLE, N.C. — Health care companies and nonprofit organizations have erected fully equipped field hospitals in North Carolina, in a pre-emptive attempt to treat residents injured by Hurricane Helene. The women's inpatient tent at the Samaritan's Purse field hospital in Linville, North Carolina. More than half of the 215 people killed by Hurricane Helene as of Friday died in North Carolina, where extreme flooding destroyed homes, washed out roads and bridges, and left survivors to mourn their loved ones. Atrium Health's Med-1 field hospital in Tryon, North Carolina, is less busy than expected after people injured in Hurricane Helene failed to materialize. Atrium Health's Med-1 field hospital.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Samaritan's, Franklin Graham, Minyvonne Burke, Wendy Henson, it’s, Henson, “ We’ve, Charles A . Cannon, Sasha Thew, Thew, Rebecca Rudisill, “ I’m, Organizations: Christian, NBC, Atrium Health, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Red, FEMA Locations: N.C, North Carolina, Newland, Linville, Greensboro, Linville , North Carolina, Tryon, Asheville, South Carolina, Tryon , North Carolina, Hurricane, Lincoln County
In nearly every corner of Karachi, there are signs of the heat wave scorching the sun-baked city. Hundreds of patients suffering from heat-related illnesses pour into the hospitals every day, pushing them far past their capacity. Even the usually bustling markets and streets have emptied as people avoid leaving their homes unless they must. In a particularly dire eight-day stretch late last month, temperatures reached 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius), with high humidity adding to the misery. That was the hottest since 2015, a year when officials reported that more than 1,200 people died from heat-related causes in Karachi.
Organizations: Asia roasts Locations: Karachi, Pakistan’s, Asia
Varanasi and New Delhi CNN —Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi once famously made a simple election promise: “good days are coming”. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses his supporters during an election campaign rally in Pushkar on April 6, 2024. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaking during a rally in Sydney, Australia, on May 23, 2023. Kalpit Bhachech/Getty Images Narendra Modi, then BJP secretary is welcomed at Ahmedabad Railway Station by the party's followers on January 31, 1992. Brent Lewin/Bloomberg/Getty Images India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses Congress at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on June 22, 2023.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Modi, Himanshu Sharma, Getty Images Modi, , , Saba Naqvi, , Vajpayee, Naqvi, Dileep Patel, John Mees, Akash Jaiswal, “ We’ve, ” Jaiswal, isn’t, Matthew Abbott, Hiraben, Damodardas, Dipam Bhachech, Lal Krishna Advani, Subhas Chandra Bose, Kalpit Bhachech, Kalpit, Negi Yasbant, Amit Dave, Ajit Solanki, Kevin Frayer, Saurabh Das, AP Modi, Manish Swarup, Lucas Jackson, Barack Obama, Adrien Helou, Reuters Modi, Adnan Abidi, Stringer, Mark Zuckerberg, David Paul Morris, Marco Longari, Angela Merkel, Tobias Schwarz, Emmanuel Macron, Charles Platiau, Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, India's, Jair Bolsonaro, Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Amit Shah, Money Sharma, Boris Johnson, Phil Noble, Anthony Albanese, Brent Lewin, Pedro Ugarte, Joe Biden, Doug Mills, Paul Mashatile, Jacoline, Imtiyaz Khan, Amr Alfiky, Patel, India’s, Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv, Rahul Gandhi, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, “ Narendra Modi, ” Mukhopadhyay, Mukhopadhyay, ” Modi, Keshav Baliram, “ Modi, BJP Modi, Lord Ram, ” Naqvi, Critics, Christophe Jaffrelot, Karan Thapar, ” Jaffrelot, Modi’s, it’s, , Raj, India Narendra Modi, Kenny Hoston, Ram, ” Raniva, That’s Organizations: New Delhi CNN, Indian, Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP, India's, Getty Images, Pew, CNN, World Health Organization, New York Times, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, Getty, Modi, Hospital, Narendra, India Today, Indian National Congress, AP, Madison, Garden, Reuters, Washington , D.C, French National Space Agency, of Yoga, Meta, Facebook, Bloomberg, European, Saudi Arabia's Crown, Rashtrapati Bhavan, Kyodo, British, Summit, Qudos Bank, White, Anadolu Agency, Anadolu, United, United Arab Emirates, Cambridge, today’s Congress Party, Harvard, The Times, Muslim, Australia Locations: Varanasi, New Delhi, Gujarat, Pushkar, India, “ India, United States, Brazil, , Sydney, Australia, Ahmedabad, Ahmadabad, Washington, Washington ,, Toulouse, France, Xian, AFP, Menlo Park , California, U.S, Pretoria, South Africa, China, Berlin, Paris, Rashtrapati, Russian, Brasilia, Glasgow, Red, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, Abu Dhabi, United Arab, Oxford, Vadnagar, Babri, Kadi, Kashmir, United Kingdom, Russia, Ukraine, Israel, Ghaziabad, Meerut, Jama
Cruise ships have hidden features that many passengers, particularly first-timers, don’t know about. Here are five things that cruisers may not know about cruise ships:There’s a morgue …Cruise ships carry millions of passengers each year, and it is not uncommon for deaths to occur on board. Most vessels are required to have a morgue and additional body bags in the event of an emergency. The morgue, usually a small stainless steel refrigerated room on the ship’s lowest deck, accommodates between two to 10 bodies, depending on the size of the vessel. …and a jailThere are no police officers on cruise ships, but most vessels have small jails known as the brig, and unruly passengers could find themselves locked up if the ship’s security team determines that they have violated the cruise line’s code of conduct.
She lost her mother and brother when the building collapsed in the earthquake. Damage from the earthquake is still visible in Antakya, Hatay province. Scott McLean/CNNSearch for the missingLast year’s earthquake killed more than 50,000 people in Turkey, and thousands more in neighboring Syria. “If I can’t find his body, then I will be waiting for him my whole life.”Smoke billows from the scene of collapsed buildings on February 7, 2023 in Hatay, Turkey. Smoke billows from the Iskenderun Port as rescue workers work at the scene of a collapsed building on February 7, 2023 in Iskenderun, Turkey.
Persons: Karabas, Sengul, Rukiye, Mehmet, , ” Karabas, Scott McLean, Guray Ervin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Ismail Demir, , Sema Gulec, DEMAK, Gulec, Weeks, Batuhan, , can’t, Burak Kara, Nur, She’s, Khaled Kassar, Kassar, Anwar, Jamal, ” Kassar, Mustafa Kara Ali, Erdogan, Yasin Akgul, Ekrem Imamoglu, Imamoglu, “ Banks Organizations: Southern, Southern Turkey CNN —, CNN, Hatay, Gulec’s, Interior Ministry, CHP, Getty, Development Party Locations: Southern Turkey, Turkey, Syria, Gaziantep province, Islahiye, Antakya, Hatay province, Iskenderun, Hatay, morgues, Syrian, Homs, Gaziantep, Turkish, AFP, Turkey’s, Istanbul, Istanbul’s, Kocaeli
Through her sobs, she said she heard the coroner’s office worker give two details that she thought couldn’t possibly be true. In a court filing, the coroner’s office denied negligence in the Pfantz case. “When I post on NamUs, I am saying the Jefferson County Coroner’s Office has failed, and I need your help,” Yates said. “Why was he left in the coroner’s office for three and a half months to just rot?” Pendar said in an interview. The county agency, like most of California’s coroner’s offices, does not post the names of unclaimed dead to NamUs.
Persons: America’s, , Erin Kimmerle, , Bettersten Wade, Dexter Wade, he’d, Marrio Moore, Moore’s, Jonathan Hankins, who’d, Benjamin Pfantz, Craig Mulcahy, aren’t, Michelle Clark, who’s, , William Swanton, William Swanton's, Swanton, Catherine Swanton, William Swanton’s, Kimmerle, Sherry Pfantz, Theron, wasn’t, Pfantz, couldn’t, ” Pfantz, Theron Pfantz, They’d, NBC News Sherry Pfantz, she’d, hadn’t, Benjamin L, , Dwight McKenna, ” “, ” Theron Pfantz, McKenna, ” McKenna, “ It’s, Richard Trahant, ” Trahant, Sherry, NamUs, Benjamin, ” Craig Mulcahy, coroners, Chuck Heurich, Heurich, ” Heurich, ” Leford “, ” Williams, Dawit, Leford Williams, Leford “, Williams, LJ Williams, Geneva Gee, Gee, ” Gee, wouldn't, NBC News Williams, Sinai Beth Israel, Bill Yates, Yates, ” Yates, Malong Pendar, Njawa, Pendar, “ We’re, Pendar’s, “ We’ve Organizations: NBC, University of South, NBC News, Crime Information, Google, Coroner's, NamUs, Medical, Orleans Parish Coroner’s, New, Orleans, New Orleans City, City Council, , National Institute of Justice, New York City’s, York City’s, Coroner’s, Medical Examiner, Santa Clara, Santa Clara County Medical Locations: Louisiana, Michigan, California, America, University of South Florida, Jackson , Mississippi, Hinds, Jackson, Hinds County, Orleans, New Orleans, Mississippi, NamUs, Connecticut, Oregon, Philadelphia, Rhode, Orleans Parish, Beauregard Parish, New, New York City, New York, Sinai, York, Jefferson County , Alabama, Birmingham, Jefferson, Santa Clara , California, Santa Clara County
In the nine-month battle of Mosul, which Israeli officials have cited as a comparison, an estimated total of 9,000 to 11,000 civilians were killed by all sides in the conflict, including many thousands killed by the Islamic State, The Associated Press found. A similar number of women and children have already been reported killed in Gaza in less than two months. More broadly, Israeli officials say this is a campaign on its own borders to wipe out Hamas, a group dedicated to Israel’s destruction. “The war here is for our existence,” one Israeli war cabinet minister, Benny Gantz, told reporters on Nov. 8. But even before those changes, the number of women and children reported dead already outpaced other conflicts.
Persons: Crawford, Brown, , Brian Castner, Mr, Castner, , Conricus, Mark Regev, Israel, Regev, ” Israel, Benny Gantz, ” Yoav Gallant, Biden, Barbara Leaf, Rick Brennan, Brennan Organizations: Islamic, Associated Press, ISIS, Amnesty International, U.S . Air Force, PBS, , Gaza Health Ministry, World Health Locations: Gaza, U.S, Iraq, United States, Afghanistan, Syria, Islamic State, Mosul, Raqqa, Ukraine, Israel, Egypt
The War Turns Gaza Into a ‘Graveyard’ for Children
  + stars: | 2023-11-18 | by ( Yousef Masoud | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +5 min
Dr. Abu Moussa recounted how he had asked other departments, including the intensive care unit, whether his son had been rushed there instead. Dr. Abu Moussa said he recognized the gray clothing Yousef had been wearing when he kissed him goodbye before leaving the house. With dread, Dr. Abu Moussa walked from the emergency room to the hospital morgue. Dr. Abu Moussa recalled looking away before a colleague embraced him. Dr. Abu Moussa’s brother, Jasir Abu Moussa, lost both of his sons and his wife, family members said.
Persons: ’ —, , Abu, Dr, Sittah, Gazans, , Volker Türk, Catherine Russell, Mohammad Abu Moussa, Khan Younis —, Israel —, Yousef, “ Where’s Yousef, Yousef Abu Moussa, Mohammad Abu Moussa Dr, Abu Moussa didn’t, Abu Moussa, gurney, Abu Moussa’s, “ Yousef, Jasir Abu Moussa, Hmaid, Abdulrahman, Nida Organizations: United Nations, UNICEF, International Committee Locations: Al, Gaza, Israel, Nasr, Khan, That’s, Europe
The Scenes of Genocide I Saw in Israeli Morgues
  + stars: | 2023-11-11 | by ( Qanta A. Ahmed | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Review and Outlook: The Secretary-General abandons Israel, a state the U.N. helped to create. Images: Zuma Press/AP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyA fetal heartbeat flutters and then stills, a bullet lodged in the embryonic heart. A body that has been decomposing for almost three weeks lies on the autopsy table, riddled with knife and bullet wounds. As an observant Muslim, I felt a duty to come and bear witness. What I saw will remain with me forever.
Persons: Israel, Mark Kelly, Kobi Valer Organizations: Zuma Press, Foreign Affairs Ministry, Israel Defense Forces Locations: Israel
Tens of thousands of displaced people sheltering at hospitals," Tedros told the 15-member council. Israel has struck Gaza - an enclave of 2.3 million people - from the air, imposed a siege and launched a ground invasion. "On average, a child is killed every 10 minutes in Gaza," Tedros said. Ambassador Gilad Erdan told the Security Council that Israel had created a taskforce to establish hospitals in southern Gaza. Tedros recalled growing up during war in Ethiopia, saying he understood what the children of Gaza must be going through.
Persons: Ronen, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Tedros, Israel, Israel's U.N, Gilad Erdan, Erdan, Robert Wood, Wood, Michelle Nichols, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: Hamas, REUTERS, UNITED NATIONS, Health Organization, United Nations Security, WHO, West Bank, Security Council, United Arab, ICRC, U.S, Security, Thomson Locations: Gaza, Israel, Palestinian, United Arab Emirates, United States, Ethiopia
DNIPRO, Ukraine—The number of Ukrainians being killed by Russian invaders has stretched resources at Morgue No. All but two of a dozen body bags lay on the floor at the rear entrance one recent morning because there weren’t enough gurneys. Forensic pathologist Vitaliy Levchenko picked his way through them, hands resting in the pockets of his white lab coat. Levchenko, 36 years old, found a shortcut at the start of the war when morgues were overwhelmed. He started snapping photos of dead soldiers’ front teeth if they were intact.
Persons: Vitaliy Levchenko, Levchenko, morgues Locations: DNIPRO, Ukraine
Yet the Gaza-based Ministry of Health — an agency in the Hamas-controlled government — continues to tally casualty numbers. "The numbers may not be perfectly accurate on a minute-to-minute basis," said Michael Ryan, of the World Health Organization's Health Emergencies Program. But an outlier is the ministry's death toll from an explosion at al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City in mid-October. There have also been conflicting accounts of the explosion's death toll. Here's a look at how Gaza's Health Ministry has generated death tolls since the war started.
Persons: Salem Abu Quta, , they've, Michael Ryan, haven't Organizations: Health —, United Nations, West Bank, Health, Palestinian, Health Ministry Locations: Salem, Rafah, Gaza, Israel, morgues, al, Ahli, Gaza City
Opinion | A Humanitarian Pause in Gaza
  + stars: | 2023-11-03 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +6 min
After weeks of airstrikes by Israel and the continued firing of rockets by Hamas, civilians in Gaza have paid a grave price. A humanitarian pause, in contrast, would give some relief to Gazan civilians and allow Israel to make progress on another key part of its objectives: the release of hostages. A humanitarian pause would also allow more of the millions of civilians who remain in Gaza an opportunity to move to relative safety until the hostilities end. There is no guarantee that a humanitarian pause, particularly in a conflict with a terrorist group, will ensure the safe return of hostages or end the suffering of civilians. Israel’s leaders have tried from the outset of this conflict to prepare their country for a long war, and a humanitarian pause is unlikely to change that fact.
Persons: Israel, Hassan al, Banna, Biden, Antony Blinken, Benjamin Netanyahu, Netanyahu, Israel — Organizations: Hamas, The Times, UNICEF, Israel Defense Forces, White House Locations: Israel, United States, “ Israel, Gaza, East, Rafah, Egypt
CNN —In Al-Shifa hospital, Gaza’s largest medical facility, a dazed and drowsy woman sits on the floor with a bleeding leg. “The situation in hospitals is miserable… (it) makes you weep,” Rajaa Musleh, a 50-year-old woman sheltering at Al-Shifa, told CNN on Thursday. ‘Overloaded’Hospital staff are exhausted, Dr. Alaa Shitali, a medical officer at Al-Shifa’s emergency department, told CNN Tuesday. “And the doctors are left to treat them with limited pain control, (as they are) running out of anesthetic drugs.” she told CNN. Hospitals in the besieged and heavily battered enclave are “hanging by a thread,” the UN said Monday, adding that around 10 hospitals in Gaza are still operational.
Persons: Rajaa, , Musleh, Mustafa Hassona, Alaa, , Shitali, Tanya Haj, Hassan, Gaza’s, Israel, Sobhi Skaik, Skaik, Khan, Ahmad Hasaballah, Atef Al Kahlout, Ali Jadallah, Bashar Morad, Morad, ” Morad, ” Musleh Organizations: CNN, United Nations Office, Humanitarian Affairs, UN’s, Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, Getty, Palestinian Ministry of Health, ’ Hospital, Al, of Health, Nasser Medical Hospital, Israel Defense Forces, Care International, Quds Hospital, The, Care, UN, Palestinian, Crescent, Palestinian Red Crescent Society Locations: Al, Gaza, Anadolu, Ramallah, Gaza City, Israel, Turkish, Palestinian, Hamas, Khan Younis, GAZA, Quds, Tel al, The Geneva
Funerals in Israel and Gaza
  + stars: | 2023-10-29 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: 1 min
Israeli air strikes continue to hammer Gaza, razing entire districts and filling morgues and streets with the dead as Israel retaliates after the Hamas assaults that have triggered some of the worst bloodletting in 75 years of conflict. Israelis meanwhile hold funerals for those killed in the Hamas rampage.
Persons: Israel Locations: Gaza
Iran's foreign minister said on Monday that Israel could face "preemptive action" if it invades Gaza. AdvertisementAdvertisementIran's government said on Monday that Israel can "expect a preemptive action" if Israel launches its anticipated invasion of Gaza. "In the coming hours, we can expect a preemptive action by the resistance front," he added, per Reuters. While Amirabdollahian did not specify what he meant by "preemptive action," he also said Israel's enemies are "capable of waging a long-term war," according to Reuters. Around 1,300 people were killed in the attacks, Israel estimated.
Persons: Israel, , Hossein Amirabdollahian, Amirabdollahian, Hossein Amir, Abdollahian, KHALED DESOUKI, Mostafa Alkharouf, Axios, It's, Israel —, Gerald R, Ford, Andrej Tarfila Organizations: Israel, Service, Reuters, Iranian Embassy, Getty, Al, Hamas, Israel Defense Forces, Getty Images, United Nations, Pentagon, , Hezbollah, Street Journal, Palestinian Health Ministry Locations: Gaza, Iran, Israel, Lebanese, Beirut, AFP, Al Jazeera, Doha, Qatar, Anadolu, Getty Images Iran
Israel's ambassador to the UK told Sky News that there is no humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Israel has launched thousands of bombs on Gaza in retaliation for Hamas' attack on Israel. AdvertisementAdvertisementAn Israeli ambassador said she doesn't believe there's a humanitarian crisis in Gaza after Israel dropped thousands of bombs on the territory, killing thousands of Palestinians. Kay Burley told Hotovely that Sky News had been showing images that indicate there is a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. An acute humanitarian crisis is unfolding to which we must respond," Sunak told lawmakers.
Persons: , Tzipi, Kay Burley, Hotovely, Benjamin Netanyahu, Rishi Sunak, Sunak Organizations: Sky News, Service, Israeli Defense Forces, Palestinian Ministry of Health, Reuters, BBC, Sky Locations: Gaza, Israel, morgues, Rafah, Egypt, Britain
Gazan authorities have started using ice cream trucks to store dead bodies, Reuters reported. AdvertisementAdvertisementHealth officials in Gaza are storing bodies in ice cream trucks as morgues and cemeteries run out of space, Reuters reported on Sunday. As the Israeli air strikes continue, officials have started using freezer trucks as temporary morgues, per Reuters. Reuters reported that ice cream trucks are also being used to store bodies because it's too risky to move the corpses to hospitals. Doha-based Al Jazeera, which is owned by the Qatari state, also reported on Saturday that ice cream trucks and refrigerated food vehicles were being used to store bodies.
Persons: , Israel, Dr, Yasser Ali, Nidal Al, Ali, Al Organizations: Reuters, Service, Hamas, News Agency, Borders, Israeli Air Force, Israel Defense Forces, United Nations Locations: Gaza, Israel, Deir al, Gaza City, Doha, Al Jazeera, Qatari
Israel has unleashed the fiercest bombardment on the Gaza Strip to hit back at the Palestinian militant group Hamas after it carried out the deadliest attack on Israel for decades. “The hospital morgue can only take 10 bodies, so we have brought in ice cream freezers from the ice cream factories in order to store the huge numbers of martyrs,” said Dr. Yasser Ali of the Shuhada Al-Aqsa hospital in Deir Al-Balah. The freezer trucks, whose sides still show advertising images of smiling children enjoying ice cream cones, are normally used to make deliveries to supermarkets. Authorities in Gaza said Israeli air strikes had killed more than 2,300 people, a quarter of them children, with nearly 10,000 wounded so far. “The Gaza Strip is in crisis and if the war continues in this way we will not be able to bury the dead.
Persons: Stringer, , Yasser Ali, Ali, ” Ali, Salama Marouf, Michael Georgy, Giles Elgood Organizations: REUTERS, Health, Hamas, Authorities, Government Media Office, Shifa, Thomson Locations: Gaza, Israel, Aqsa, Deir Al
Israel, in response, ordered a “complete siege” of Gaza, including cutting off food, water and fuel, while unleashing its heaviest ever airstrikes on the blockaded enclave. At least 2,215 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza from Israeli strikes, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said Saturday. A hospital in Gaza had to use ice cream trucks as makeshift morgues because of the growing number of bodies. His five family members – four cousins and his aunt – stopped responding to the family’s WhatsApp group at some point. With the situation in Israel escalating, Greenberg said, he managed to book a flight to Rome the next morning.
Persons: “ It’s, Aref, , , ” Dori Roberts, … It’s, ” Roberts, It’s, Benjamin Netanyahu, who’s, , , it’s, Yahia Abuhashem, Abuhashem, haven’t, ” Abuhashem, “ You’re, “ That’s, ’ Doron Katz Asher, Dori Roberts Raz Asher, Dori Roberts, Asher, Roberts, Efrat Katz, Doron Katz Asher, Raz, Nir Oz, , Jason Greenberg, Carmela Dan, Jason Greenberg Dan, ” Greenberg, Greenberg, that’s Organizations: CNN, Amro, , Israel Defense Forces, Palestinian Ministry of Health, Communication Locations: Columbus , Ohio, Gaza, Aref Abou, Austin , Texas, Israel, United States, Ohio, Abou, American, Al, Gaza City, ” Abou, Chicago, Austin, Aviv, Massachusetts, Tel Aviv, , Rome
Gaza's hospitals "risk turning into morgues," officials and the Red Cross warned. Palestinian health officials said health services in Gaza have entered a "critical stage." Palestinian health officials said Wednesday that health services in the Gaza Strip, where Hamas rules, have now entered a "critical stage" and that "medicines, medical consumption and fuel are running out." "Without electricity, hospitals risk turning into morgues," Carboni warned. "Continued disconnection of the Israeli occupation of electricity, water, and fuel poses a danger to the lives of the injured and patients and causes a serious health and environmental disaster," the Palestinian health ministry said.
Persons: , Fabrizio Carboni, Carboni, Richard Brennan, Brennan, It's, Israel, Yoav Gallant, Ashraf Al Organizations: Service, Hamas, International Committee, Facebook, Cross, Health, Guardian, WHO, Washington Post, Wall Street, Israel's, Gaza, Palestinian Ministry of Health, CNN Locations: morgues, Gaza, Israel, Palestinian, Egypt, Rafah
Hamas' deadly attacks last weekend were the worst breach of Israel's security apparatus in decades. They carried out the attacks, in part, by posting misleading messages on monitored channels, NYT reported. And Israeli officials took those messages at face value, the officials, who laid out several reasons why Israel didn't anticipate the assault, told the publication. In addition to failing to vet the accuracy of the messages, Israeli intelligence officials weren't diligent in monitoring key channels militants used to communicate, the report said. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Israeli Defense Forces said that more than 1,200 people died as a result of Hamas' attacks, including at least 25 Americans.
Persons: , Israel didn't, Israel, It's, Yoav Gallant Organizations: Service, New York Times, Israeli Defense Forces, Washington Post, Cross Locations: Israel, Gaza
Human Rights Watch has confirmed that Israel used white phosphorus in military operations in Gaza and along the Israel-Lebanon border. White phosphorus is a chemical that ignites when it's exposed to oxygen and causes severe burns when it comes in contact with human skin. AdvertisementAdvertisementHuman Rights Watch confirmed on Thursday that Israel used white phosphorus in military operations in the Gaza Strip and along the Israel-Lebanon border. White phosphorus is a chemical that ignites when it's exposed to oxygen and can cause severe burns when it comes into contact with human skin. In addition to verifying the two videos, HRW also interviewed two people who described the use of the munitions over Gaza.
Persons: , Ali Shoeib 🇱🇧 ( Organizations: Rights Watch, Service Locations: Israel, Gaza, Lebanon, Gaza City
The main Martyrs Cemetery in Khan Younis was already nearly full long before the latest bout of warfare brought new pressure for grave sites. Like many other Gaza cemeteries, a "Burial is prohibited here" sign hung on its fence. We have to bury them in random areas scattered around between the houses or in empty lots donated by landlords," said Adel Hamada, a volunteer helping with burials at Khan Younis in southern Gaza. CONSTANT BURIALSThe Samour family was killed on Wednesday night when a strike hit their house in Khan Younis. In Khan Younis, a group of people stood atop the debris remaining from the destruction of a house by an airstrike.
Persons: Nidal, Khan Younis, Adel Hamada, Gravediggers, morgues, Abdelaziz al, peeped, Fabrizio Carboni, Hanan al, Attar, Nidal al, Angus McDowall, Nick Macfie Organizations: Hamas, Shifa, International Committee Locations: GAZA, Gaza, Israel, U.N, Khan, Gaza City, morgues
The main Martyrs Cemetery in Khan Younis was already nearly full long before the latest bout of warfare brought new pressure for grave sites. Like many other Gaza cemeteries, a "Burial is prohibited here" sign hung on its fence. We have to bury them in random areas scattered around between the houses or in empty lots donated by landlords," said Adel Hamada, a volunteer helping with burials at Khan Younis in southern Gaza. CONSTANT BURIALSThe Samour family was killed on Wednesday night when a strike hit their house in Khan Younis. In Khan Younis, a group of people stood atop the debris remaining from the destruction of a house by an airstrike.
Persons: Khan Younis, Adel Hamada, Gravediggers, morgues, Abdelaziz al, Abu Mustafa, peeped, Fabrizio Carboni, Hanan al, Attar, Nidal al, Angus McDowall, Nick Macfie Organizations: Hamas, REUTERS, Shifa, International Committee, Thomson Locations: GAZA, Gaza, Israel, U.N, Khan, Gaza City, morgues
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