11:46 PM @samerzaneen Zamzam Ajrami, a 15-year-old girl, is currently besieged in Jabalia camp, North Gaza, by Israeli occupation forces. She has been trapped since late Sunday afternoon in the Baghdad Hall at the Rehabilitation of the Disabled Association. With her are her siblings, her martyred mother, and her aunt, who has special needs, is severely injured and bleeding. Despite the desperate situation, they remain unreachable as the siege continues, preventing any form of aid or evacuation
زمزم عجرمي، فتاة تبلغ من العمر 15 عامأ، محاصرة حاليأ في مخيم جباليا شمال غزة من قبل قوات الاحتلال الإسرائيلي، ظلت محاصرة منذ مساء الأحد في صالة بغداد بجمعية تأهيل المعاقين برفقتها أشقاؤها، ووالدتها الشهيدة، وخالتها المصابة بجروح خطيرة وتنزف، على الرغم من الوضع اليائس، فإن الحصار يمنع وصول أي شكل من اشكال المساعدة أو الإخلاء 11:21 PM @samerzaneen علي العطار شاب مجتهد صحفي مثابر صنع لنفسه مكان من وسط الحرب والدمار
لا ينام ليلا ولا يرتاح نهاراً وهو ينقل صورة أبناء شعبه عبر شاشة قناة الجزيرة في المنطقة الوسطى بقطاع غزة
علي أصيب بشظية قاتلة استقرت في وسط رأسه ولا يزال يعاني من وضع صحي خطير للغاية في ظل انعدام العلاج بغزة
#علي_لازم_يتعالج
In an effort to raise the voice and image of truth, Palestinian journalists launch a campaign to support and assist injured colleague Ali Al-Attar
In a move that reflects the commitment of Palestinian journalists to defending freedom of the press and the rights of workers in this field, Palestinian journalists decided to launch a campaign to support and assist fellow our photojournalist Ali Al-Attar, who was injured while performing his professional duty.
The campaign came to emphasize the need to provide the necessary treatment for our colleague Ali, especially a treatment abroad, due to his health condition that requires advanced care. The campaign aims to mobilize local and international support, and to demand the rights of journalists to receive the necessary care and protection while performing their field work.
We call on all fellow journalists, human rights activists, media institutions, and all activists to participate actively in this campaign, which will be launched today, Tuesday, at 9 pm across 1:31 PM @samarabuelouf I saw this woman at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al Balah. So many people had been killed in the area that day that bodies were lined up outside, and she was moving along the rows, looking for her brothers and her sister.
Once she found her sister, who she said had been pregnant and had gone into contractions the night before, she began talking to her. “You were scared of giving birth, and now you have gone to your rest before you had to go through it,” she said. She spoke to her brothers, too, calling out their names and talking about their qualities. She was crying but also holding herself steadfast, and people were comforting her.
I have seven sisters. I often think of them when I am photographing, and I worry about them constantly. I also worry about my children, especially when I see journalist colleagues losing their children to bombardment. What would it be for me if I lost them? Or if they lost me?
— @samarabuelouf
@nytimes
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/07/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-war-photos.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare