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Thursday, February 12, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "killed" (90 articles)

Gulf Times
International

Three people killed and eight injured in a shooting in North Carolina, USA

Three people were killed, and eight others injured in a mass shooting in Southport, North Carolina. US media reported today that three people were killed when an unknown gunman opened fire at the port. Meanwhile, the condition of the eight injured is not yet known. Mass shootings are one of the most prominent security and social challenges facing the United States in recent decades. This phenomenon has become increasingly frequent, claiming dozens of lives annually. These incidents occur in a variety of locations, including schools, universities, shopping malls, workplaces, and public events.

Gulf Times
International

3 Killed, 16 injured in minibus collision in southern Turkey

Three people were killed, and 16 others were injured when a minibus carrying farmworkers collided with a truck in Mersin Province, southern Turkey. According to Anadolu Agency, the minibus rammed into the rear of a trailer on the Ankara-Tarsus highway, killing three passengers. Medical teams transported 16 injured people to hospital for treatment. In May, 12 people were injured in a similar crash involving a workers' bus and a car in Kahramanmaras Province, also in southern Turkey.

Reuters cameraman Hussam al-Masri, who was killed in Israeli strikes on Nasser hospital on August 25, 2025, works at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip August 7, 2024. REUTERS
Region

Visual evidence overthrows Israel's official story for deadly attack on Gaza hospital

Attack killed 22 and added to media deaths Israel has failed to explainIsrael says it targeted a Hamas camera, but the device belonged to ReutersA Reuters analysis of visual evidence and other information about the Israeli attack on a Gaza hospital last month contradicts Israel's explanation of what happened in the deadly strike.The August 25 attack on Nasser Hospital killed 22, including five journalists. Israeli forces planned the attack using drone footage which, a military official said, showed a Hamas camera that was the target of the strike. But the visual evidence and other reporting by Reuters establish that the camera in the footage actually belonged to the news agency and had long been used by one of its own journalists.The Israeli military official now says that the troops acted without the required approval of the senior regional commander in charge of operations in Gaza. The official told Reuters about the breach of command after Reuters presented the findings of its investigation to the Israel Defense Forces.A day after Israeli tanks shelled Nasser Hospital, the official said the IDF's initial review found that troops targeted a Hamas camera because it was filming them from the hospital. The official said troops viewed the camera with suspicion because it was covered by a towel. A decision was made to destroy it, the official said then.A screenshot from the IDF drone footage shows the camera, draped with a two-toned cloth, on the hospital stairwell. The military official confirmed to Reuters last week that the cloth-covered camera was the target.But the cloth shown in the screenshot was not put there by Hamas. It was a prayer rug belonging to Hussam al-Masri, a Reuters journalist who was killed in the attack, the news agency's investigation of the incident found. At least 35 times since May, Masri had positioned his camera on the same stairwell at Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, to record live broadcasts fed to Reuters media clients across the globe. He often covered his camera with the green-and-white prayer rug to protect it from heat and dust, Reuters found. The Reuters investigation provides the most complete account to date of how the attack unfolded, including that Israeli forces breached the chain of command. Reuters also has established definitively that the targeted camera belonged to the news agency. The Associated Press, which lost a journalist in the hospital attack, previously reported that it had found strong indications that the camera Israeli forces described as their target belonged to Reuters.The IDF claim that Hamas was filming Israeli military forces from Nasser Hospital "is false and fabricated," said Ismail Al-Thawabta, director of the Hamas-run Gaza government media office. Israel is trying to "cover up a full-fledged war crime against the hospital, its patients and medical staff," he said.Despite the new disclosures, a month after the attack the IDF has yet to fully explain how it ended up hitting the Reuters camera and killing Masri. The Israeli military also has not explained:Why it did not warn hospital staff or Reuters that it intended to strike the hospital.Why, after striking the camera in its initial attack, the IDF shelled the stairwell again nine minutes later, killing other journalists and emergency responders who had rushed to the scene.Whether it took into account that the hospital stairwell where Masri was filming when he was killed was a spot used regularly by many journalists to record footage and file reports throughout the war.Who approved the strike. The military official did not say who gave the order to attack despite the lack of approval from the regional commander.The absence of a full explanation of what happened at Nasser Hospital fits a pattern in Israeli military attacks that have killed journalists since Israel launched its nearly two-year offensive after the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. The Committee to Protect Journalists says it has documented 201 journalists and media workers killed in Gaza, Israel and Lebanon, where the war spilled over shortly after the initial attack. The count includes 193 Palestinians killed by Israel in Gaza, six killed by Israel in Lebanon, and two Israelis killed in the October 7 attack.The CPJ said Israel has never published the results of a formal investigation or held anyone accountable in the killings of journalists by the IDF. "Furthermore, none of these incidents prompted a meaningful review of Israel's rules of engagement, nor did international condemnation lead to any change in the pattern of attacks on journalists over the past two years," said Sara Qudah, CPJ's regional director for the Middle East and North Africa."The IDF operates to mitigate harm to civilians as much as possible, including journalists," an IDF spokesperson said. "Given the ongoing exchanges of fire, remaining in an active combat zone has inherent risks. The IDF directs its strikes only towards military targets and military operatives, and does not target civilian objects and civilians, including media organizations and journalists as such."In examining the August 25 attack by Israeli forces, Reuters reviewed more than 100 videos and photos from the scene and interviewed more than two dozen people familiar with the attack and the events leading up to it. Those sources include two Israeli military officials and two Israeli military academics briefed by Israeli military sources on the strike.All told, 22 people were killed in the two attacks, including journalist Mariam Dagga, who worked for the Associated Press and other news organizations, and MoazAbu Taha, a freelance journalist who worked with several news organizations, including Reuters. Dagga and Masri were among many journalists who routinely gathered on the landing to record from a high vantage point and to file reports from the Khan Younis area of Gaza. Masri's live broadcasts captured Israeli strikes, ambulances bringing the wounded and the dead to the hospital, and the destruction of the surrounding area.A few days before the August 25 strike, an Israeli military surveillance drone recorded a camera on the top level of the eastern stairwell at Nasser Hospital, according to the Israeli military official, who cited the IDF's initial inquiry, and the two military academics with close contacts in the Israeli military. Troops characterized the camera as a threat, they said, because Hamas has used cameras to plan attacks. Asked whether the group used cameras, the Hamas official said it used them to document its attacks on Israeli soldiers.A screenshot taken from the drone footage shows a thick, two-toned cloth draped over the camera. A person wearing a white head covering and dark clothing sits behind it. The screenshot was first published on August 25 by an Israeli TV news channel, N12, which said at the time that it depicted the camera "that endangered our troops."Reuters obtained the screenshot from Refael Hayun, an Israeli civilian who says he monitors the situation in Gaza, where he has contacts on the ground. Hayun said the drone footage was captured around 2:15 p.m. on August 21. On that day, Masri set up a camera to record from the hospital stairwell continuously between 8:00 a.m. and 6:14 p.m., according to a Reuters archive of the footage.Hayun declined to identify the source of the screenshot or how he obtained it. But the Israeli military official confirmed that the screenshot is from drone footage that Israeli troops recorded before the August 25 attack and shows the camera that troops targeted in the shelling. The official, who said his information is from the IDF's initial inquiry, did not provide the precise date of the screenshot but said the camera was seen "repeatedly for many days in a row.""The camera from that picture was the camera that they attacked," the Israeli military official told Reuters on September 16.The cloth covering Masri's camera became a focus of attention after the attack - both because the Israelis cited it as a factor that justified the strike and because it provided a clue to the true ownership of the device.On the day after the strike, the Israeli military official referred to the cloth as a "towel" and said troops viewed it with suspicion. The official said that towels can be used to evade IDF heat sensors and visual observations from the sky. The troops saw "a lot of suspicious behavior that was tracked for days and cross-referenced with intelligence," he said, without elaborating.But instead of a towel, the cloth covering the camera in the drone screenshot was Masri's green and white prayer rug, Reuters found. It is shown in an August 13 photo taken by Dagga, the AP journalist. Dagga's photo captures Masri standing next to his camera in the same hospital stairwell that was targeted by the IDF.Masri routinely covered the Reuters camera to protect the equipment's optics and electronics from the scorching heat that enveloped Gaza in August, according to three members of the Reuters visuals team. He often used the thick cloth, which was his prayer rug, according to Masri's brother Ezzeldeen al-Masri. Reuters was never told by Israel not to cover its camera with a towel or other cloth, a spokesperson for the news agency said.Witnesses say the camera in the drone screenshot could only be Masri's. No one else in the last few months used a large video camera on a tripod to record there or covered the gear with a prayer rug. Other journalists used cellular phones, the witnesses said.Adding to the Israeli military's suspicion about the camera and its location was that troops also saw another "towel" covering the head of a person nearby, the military official said.In the screenshot from IDF drone footage that shows the troops' target, a person sits near the camera wearing dark clothing and what appears to be a white headscarf. The person appears to be Dagga, in a similar outfit to what she is seen wearing in four other visuals taken at that same location, including one from August 16 and another from the day of the attack. On August 21, the day the IDF drone footage was recorded, Dagga was using her phone to record a live broadcast from the stairwell for the AP.Reuters visuals journalist Mohammad Salem, who left Gaza earlier this year and knew Dagga well, identified the person in the drone screenshot as the AP reporter. Salem said he recognized her head scarf. Also, Masri had told Salem that Dagga was recording near him on the stairwell a few days before the attack.When he was killed on August 25, Masri had been recording from the hospital's stairwell for about two hours. As he had done routinely throughout the month, he had positioned his camera on the fourth floor to capture live coverage of the area. The elevated spot allowed for better visibility, access to electricity and a stronger internet connection, said Salem. From the stairwell, the camera recorded the hospital's surroundings, including the busy street out front."We thought the hospital was relatively safe, especially since everyone knows that there are journalists in this place and that they use it on a daily basis," said Salem.In the early days of the war, Reuters shared with the Israeli military locations of its teams in Gaza, including at Nasser Hospital, to try to ensure they would not be targeted, the Reuters spokesperson said. But after many journalists were killed in IDF strikes, Reuters stopped giving precise coordinates."However, Israel was fully aware that Reuters and multiple other news organizations were operating from Nasser Hospital, which has been one of the nerve centers for coverage out of Gaza," the spokesperson said.Witnesses said the IDF had drones in the sky throughout the attack. About 40 minutes before the first tank strike, Reuters photographer Hatem Khaled was outside the hospital. He sent a message to Khan Younis colleagues on a WhatsApp group: "Quadcopter now, exactly over Nasser Hospital."At 10:12 a.m., about four minutes after the first attack, freelance journalist Khaled Shaath recorded a quadcopter drone flying over the hospital.Ahmed Abu Ubeid, a doctor in the forensic medicine department at Nasser who was injured in the second strike, said the drone hovered in the air near the hospital entrance for more than 10 minutes. "It was recording and seeing us and seeing we are all doctors and civil defense and nurses and journalists," Abu Ubeid told Reuters. "So, they saw us, and decided to hit us."Abu Ubeid said some of those killed and injured in the attack were on the ground level, multiple floors below where the tank shells struck, and were hit with shrapnel.Israeli forces have repeatedly targeted hospitals in Gaza, saying Hamas was operating from them, which the group denies.Attacks on hospitals typically constitute war crimes, two legal scholars told Reuters. There is a narrow exception when a hospital is used for "activity harmful to the enemy," said Tom Dannenbaum, a professor at Stanford Law School. But even when this threshold is met, attackers must ensure that expected civilian harm isn't excessive compared to military advantage, and they must first give warning to allow the other side to stop misusing the hospital and provide reasonable time to comply, he said.Mohammed Saqer, head of nursing at Nasser Hospital, said the IDF had the phone numbers for hospital staff and regularly called the head of the hospital to ask about the number of patients and supplies. The hospital never received a warning of the attack, he said."If they had warned us, we would have prevented this catastrophe," Saqer told Reuters over text message. Reuters also never received a warning of the attack, according to the Reuters spokesperson.The names of Masri, 49, Dagga, 33, and those of three other journalists killed in the August 25 attack add to a long list of journalists killed during the Israeli offensive while doing their work and in circumstances the IDF has rarely helped elucidate.Reuters still has received no explanation for why, in October 2023, an Israeli tank fired two shells at a group of clearly identified journalists in Lebanon who had been filming cross-border shelling. Thestrikes killed Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah and wounded six other journalists. Nearly two years after the attack, the case is still under examination, an IDF official told Reuters last week. Hostilities spread to the Israel-Lebanon border shortly after the Hamas attack on October 7, when Hezbollah began firing rockets into Israel.The list of unexplained IDF killings of journalists dates back to before the Gaza war.In May 2022, Al Jazeera correspondent Shireen Abu Akleh, wearing a clearly marked press vest, was shot dead while covering an Israeli army raid in the West Bank city of Jenin. Israeli authorities initially said that armed Palestinians were likely responsible; later, Israel's military concluded there was "a high possibility" that the Palestinian-American national was "accidentally hit by IDF gunfire."No criminal investigation would be launched, the military said at the time.Al Jazeera condemned the killing of its reporter as a "heinous crime," saying it was intended to "prevent the media from conducting their duty." In May 2023, a military spokesman told CNN that the IDF was "very sorry" for the death of Abu Akleh. The IDF has not provided a full account of how she was killed.After the killings of Abdallah and Abu Akleh, Israel said its forces do not intentionally target journalists.Since October 7, 2023, however, Israel has accused at least 15 journalists or media workers it killed in Gaza and Lebanon of being members of resistance groups, according to data from the Committee to Protect Journalists. The CPJ said it found no case in which Israel presented credible or sufficient evidence to justify the killings.The military official who spoke to Reuters and other journalists the day after the Nasser Hospital attack said repeatedly that the IDF had not targeted the Reuters or AP journalists. "They are a big part of why we're looking into this incident," he said. "There was no intention to harm them."That same day, the Israeli military released the names of six men whom it said were "terrorists" killed in the strikes on the hospital, without providing any evidence.One of the men listed by the IDF, Omar Abu Teim, was killed elsewhere, not in the August 25 attack, said Al-Thawabta, the head of the Hamas-run Gaza government media office.Another man was a first responder, according to a statement by the Palestinian Civil Defense, Gaza's emergency services organization. Reuters identified him in footage from August 25, in which he's seen rushing up the staircase after the first strike and helping direct the emergency response. After the second strike, his body can be seen hanging off the ledge on the fourth floor.A third man listed by the IDF was a member of the hospital staff, according to a post on Nasser Hospital's Facebook page.Two other men were visiting patients at the hospital and were taking part in rescue efforts when they were killed in the second strike, according to members of their families, who said the men had no affiliation with armed groups.Reuters could find no details about the sixth man, except to confirm that he was killed in the strikes on August 25.On the day after the attack, the military official who spoke to Reuters said that troops operating near Nasser Hospital identified a camera pointed at them in the days before the strike and that actions were approved "to remove the threat." In a separate statement released publicly the same day, the IDF identified the troops involved as belonging to the Golani Brigade.Masri's recordings from Gaza captured a wide array of scenes in front of Nasser Hospital, with some shots showing military activity far in the distance. On August 20 and 21, for instance, the camera captured Israeli diggers and a bulldozer excavating a demolished area 2.4 kilometers northeast of the hospital. Satellite imagery of the area on those dates shows the equipment surrounded by at least five tanks, which are not discernible in Masri's footage.Citing the IDF's initial review of the August 25 incident, the Israeli military official told Reuters that troops had correctly identified the target of the attack. The official, however, said that the IDF had launched a closer examination into possible mistakes made in the attack's execution."We're looking into this incident to understand what went wrong in the process of execution, acting against a real target that was threatening the forces," he said.Among the failures, Reuters found, was a breach in the chain of command.IDF rules require the approval of a very senior officer before firing on a civilian target if troops are not under attack, the military official said. In the case of Nasser Hospital, the forces on the ground would have had to obtain authorization from the head of the IDF's Southern Command, which has overall responsibility for the Gaza front. But the troops did not have approval from the commander, Maj. Gen. Yaniv Asor, the military official said. Reached by phone, Asor told Reuters that he was not authorized to speak to the press.Authorization for the strike would have had to include a legal assessment to ensure that the characterization of the target complied with international law, a second Israeli military official said. Such assessments are binding on Israeli troops; an attack is not supposed to proceed without this permission. The official said he was not aware that any such legal advisory was sought or given before the attack on Nasser.In addition to possible mistakes in the execution of the attack, the IDF has said it also would review which ammunition was approved prior to the strike and how.Reuters obtained photos of metal fragments found at Nasser Hospital taken by a doctor at the scene that day. The fragments are from tail fins of Israeli-made 120 mm tank rounds, according to five munitions experts who reviewed the photos of the fragments and visuals of the strike for Reuters.A similar tank shell was used in the 2023 Israeli military attack that killed Reuters video journalist Abdallah in Lebanon.A tank round was a disproportionate munition selection for the Nasser strike, given that the IDF says its target was a camera and that it was located at or within a hospital, said Wes Bryant, a former senior targeting adviser and policy analyst at the Pentagon, where he was branch chief of civilian harm assessments. But even a weapon that is likely to result in fewer unintended injuries and deaths than a tank shell will still have a high casualty count when aimed at a crowded stairwell, Bryant said.The IDF still has not explained why it struck the stairwell a second time, as journalists and first responders crowded on the landing.Reuters photographer Khaled was outside the hospital preparing to start his workday when the first blast hit. He grabbed his camera and rushed toward the building, documenting the scene along the way. He climbed the stairs to get to Masri. When he found him, Masri was already dead, his body covered in dust, his clothes torn and his equipment damaged.Khaled kept filming. "I couldn't do anything to help him other than document what had happened," he said. Rescue workers arrived and began moving Masri, placing him in a white bag.At 10:17 a.m., as Khaled and the rescuers walked down the stairs with Masri's body, the Israeli military struck the stairwell for the second time.Two munitions can be seen hitting the hospital a fraction of a second apart in footage obtained by Reuters. Khaled filmed the strike, which left him injured. Khaled has hearing loss from the blast and will require more surgery to remove shrapnel.

A departure board displays flight cancellations at Hong Kong International Airport, as Super Typhoon Ragasa disrupts travel, in Hong Kong, China, September 23, 2025. REUTERS
International

Super Typhoon Ragasa kills 14 in Taiwan leading Qatar Airways to suspend flights through today to Shenzhen and Macau

Holmes Chan with Peter Catterall in Yangjiang Fierce winds, pounding rain and high seas battered Hong Kong on Wednesday as Super Typhoon Ragasa headed into southern China after causing a lake burst that killed at least 14 people in Taiwan.The Chinese finance hub saw scores of fallen trees and flooding in multiple neighborhoods, with the storm surge smashing the glass doors of an upscale hotel and flooding its lobby, according to footage circulated online.Ragasa is churning away from Hong Kong gradually around noon (0400 GMT) but the city will still be lashed by hurricane-force winds, according to the Hong Kong Observatory, which issued the highest level of typhoon warning overnight.Ragasa has brought "significant storm surge", with waters in coastal areas rising more than three metres above the reference level, the observatory added.The nearby casino hub of Macau — which also saw widespread flooding — has suspended power supply to some low-lying areas, according to utility company CEM.In Taiwan, at least 14 people were killed and 18 injured when a decades-old lake barrier burst in the eastern Hualien county after Ragasa pounded the island, according to regional officials.The super typhoon killed at least two people while ripping through the northern Philippines.China's Ministry of Emergency Management said the typhoon is expected to make landfall along Guangdong's coast between Zhuhai and Zhanjiang from midday to late Wednesday.Authorities across mainland China ordered businesses and schools to shut down in at least 10 cities across the nation's south, affecting tens of millions of people.Streets were mostly empty as wind picked up on Wednesday morning in Yangjiang, a city west of Hong Kong near where the typhoon is expected to make landfall.One local shopkeeper told AFP she was not sure if she would be able to open her convenience store today. "It will depend on the weather conditions," she said.The Yangjiang train station — normally bustling with activity, locals said — stood empty, with rail travel suspended Wednesday across the province of Guangdong. Reports of flooding Multiple districts in Hong Kong saw instances of flooding, according to images circulated on social media and verified by AFP.At the Fullerton Ocean Park Hotel, next to a theme park, a man was seen losing his balance after storm surge shattered the glass front doors and swept into its lobby, one of the videos showed."We are doing all we can to mitigate the impact brought about by the super typhoon," a spokesperson for the hotel told AFP.Floodwaters rushed into the seaside Heng Fa Chuen residential estate and covered its interior courtyards, another video clip showed.Strong winds ripped off the top of a pedestrian footbridge, while many of the city's tall buildings swayed and rattled in the harsh winds.An off-duty firefighter surnamed Tse told AFP he was "a bit worried" about the safety of nearby bamboo scaffoldings as he walked home after an 11-hour shift of "non-stop" work."This one was forecast to be quite bad, so we were expecting a bit of chaos... (but) everywhere seems to be functioning quite efficiently still," said 27-year-old chef Benjamin Phizacklea.Rail operator MTR said train services on open sections were suspended, with limited service available on the underground sections.Authorities said more than 760 people sought refuge at the 50 temporary shelters across Hong Kong.The city's airport operator said "only a limited number of cargo flights" were scheduled for Wednesday, with its website listing hundreds of canceled passenger flights.A five-year-old boy and his mother fell into the sea on Tuesday afternoon while they were watching the waves in the Chai Wan district, according to police. Both were in critical condition after they were rushed to hospital.The boy's 40-year-old father, who reportedly jumped into the water to save his family, was also hospitalized.

Gulf Times
Region

18 Palestinians killed in Gaza since dawn amid ongoing Israeli offensive

At least 18 Palestinians were killed early Tuesday by Israeli occupation gunfire and shelling across the Gaza Strip, according to local health officials. Medical sources said 12 bodies were transported to Al-Shifa Hospital, while six others were taken to the Baptist Hospital. The death toll from Israel's ongoing military campaign in Gaza, which began on Oct. 7, 2023, has risen to 65,344, with 166,795 people wounded. The majority of casualties were women and children. These figures remain incomplete, as many victims are still trapped under rubble or lying in the streets, where emergency crews have been unable to reach them.

Gulf Times
Region

20 Palestinians killed by Israeli gunfire and shelling across Gaza Strip since dawn

Medical sources reported that 20 Palestinians have been killed since dawn today due to Israeli occupation forces' airstrikes and shelling across the Gaza Strip.According to the same sources, 12 of the martyrs were transferred to Al-Shifa Hospital, 3 to Al-Maamadani Hospital, 4 to Al-Aqsa Hospital, and 1 to Nasser Hospital.The Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023, has killed 65,283 citizens, the majority of whom are children and women, and injured 166,575 others, according to a preliminary toll. A number of victims remain trapped under the rubble and in the streets, as ambulance and rescue crews cannot reach them.

Smoke rises from the city during a Russian drone and missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Dnipro, Ukraine September 20, 2025. REUTERS/
International

Russia claims heavy Ukrainian losses and drone interceptions in latest military operations

The Russian Ministry of Defense announced Sunday its forces had killed nearly 1,280 Ukrainian soldiers and intercepted 65 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in a series of ongoing military operations across various frontlines. In an official statement, the ministry said Russian ground forces carried out targeted strikes against Ukrainian military units in multiple combat zones. The attacks reportedly resulted in the destruction of dozens of armored vehicles, artillery systems, military transport vehicles, ammunition depots, and electronic warfare stations. Additionally, the ministry reported that the Black Sea Fleet destroyed two Ukrainian unmanned surface vessels in the northwestern part of the Black Sea. Russian operational—tactical aircraft and drones also targeted what were described as transport infrastructure facilities being used to support Ukrainian military operations, as well as sites allegedly involved in the launch and storage of long-range drones. These claims come amid the continuing war that began on February 24, 2022, with both Russia and Ukraine regularly issuing conflicting reports on battlefield developments and military successes. Neither side's claims can be independently verified, and both continue to engage in intense information campaigns alongside ongoing hostilities.

Gulf Times
Region

Occupation's bombing of Gaza leaves several martyrs

Two Palestinian children were killed and several others injured today when Israeli aircraft bombed a school sheltering displaced families in Gaza City.According to Palestinian news agency WAFA, Israeli drones carried out multiple strikes on the Al Sabra neighborhood in the city's northwest, coinciding with heavy artillery fire and the detonation of explosive-laden vehicles in the same area. At the same time, Israeli forces continued to demolish residential buildings around Gaza City, while warplanes launched a series of air raids on the Tel Al-Hawa district in the city's southwest.In central Gaza Strip, Israeli artillery shelled the northern parts of Al Bureij refugee camp, and occupation forces opened fire on Palestinians waiting for humanitarian aid near the Netzarim corridor. An Israeli airstrike near the electricity company in Al Nuseirat refugee camp caused extensive damage to several facilities and civilian infrastructure. The ongoing Israeli assault on Gaza, which began on Oct. 7, 2023, has now killed 65,174 people and injured 166,071 others, the vast majority of them women and children, amid what humanitarian agencies describe as an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.

Gulf Times
Region

3 ISIS members killed in airstrike in Northern Iraq

Three ISIS members were killed in an airstrike southeast of the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk. A security source said that Iraqi aircraft carried out an airstrike targeting an ISIS hideout in Wadi Al-Shai, southeast of Kirkuk.The source added that the strike resulted in the killing of three members, including a prominent leader in the organization, and the complete destruction of the hideout.Iraqi security forces continue to pursue remnants of ISIS throughout the country's various provinces, particularly as its elements periodically target army and police personnel in armed attacks.

Gulf Times
International

3 Police officers killed, 2 injured by a gunman in Pennsylvania

US authorities announced that three police officers were killed, and two others seriously injured in a shooting carried out by a gunman in the eastern US state of Pennsylvania before police were able to neutralize him.State Police Commissioner Christopher Paris confirmed at a press conference that five officers were shot on Thursday, three of whom were fatally wounded, while two were taken to the hospital and are in critical condition.

Gulf Times
Region

17 Palestinians martyred in ongoing Israeli bombing of Gaza Strip

Seventeen Palestinians were killed and others wounded Wednesday morning as a result of the ongoing Israeli bombing of the Gaza Strip. Palestinian news agency (WAFA) quoted medical sources as saying that three Palestinians from one family were martyred in an Israeli airstrike on a tent housing displaced persons in Al-Mawasi area of ​​Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip.A Palestinian man, his pregnant wife, and his daughter were also martyred in an Israeli airstrike on a house in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip.In the Tel Al-Hawa neighborhood in the south, two Palestinians were martyred and others wounded when Israeli occupation forces bombed a residential apartment.WAFA reported that in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in northwest Gaza, a number of Palestinians were martyred and wounded in an Israeli attack that targeted a building, while occupation aircraft bombed a house in the neighborhood's first street.On October 7, 2023, Israeli occupying forces launched an assault on the Gaza Strip, resulting in the deaths of 64,871 people, the majority of whom were women and children, and the injury of 164,610 others. This is a preliminary toll, with a number of victims still buried under the rubble and on the streets, unable to be reached by ambulances and rescue teams.

Gulf Times
International

3 killed, 70 injured in gas tanker truck explosion in Mexico

At least three people were killed and 70 others injured when a tanker truck overturned, caught fire and exploded on a highway in southeastern Mexico City. Mexico City Mayor Clara Brugada said on X that 70 people were injured and three died, according to the preliminary toll. A preliminary list of those hospitalized was published and will be updated as medical assessments continue. The Mexico City Fire Department later stated that the fire inside and around the overturned tanker truck, which was transporting liquefied petroleum gas, had been completely extinguished. This is the second major highway accident in Mexico this week.