logo
Gaza's youngest influencer, 11, killed in Israeli strike after tragically offering war zone survival tips

Gaza's youngest influencer, 11, killed in Israeli strike after tragically offering war zone survival tips

Daily Mail​4 days ago

Gaza 's youngest influencer, who posted survival tips for living in a war zone was killed in Israeli air strikes on Friday night.
Yaqeen Hammad showed over 100,000 followers how to cook without gas but also how children living under bombardment found joy in daily life - posting images smiling and dancing.
The 11-year-old was one of several children tragically killed in the strikes in central Gaza.
Her body was torn apart and found between the rubble of the house that she lived in with her family in Al-Baraka area of Deir al-Bala.
In one of her final posts, she wrote: 'Today was a day of joy for Gaza's orphans – we were giving them new clothes to bring a little happiness.'
She also regularly shared videos of her work with Ouena collective, a Gaza-based non-profit organisation for humanitarian relief.
They were posted under the handle @yaqeen_hmad, providing humanitarian updates and clips of her distributing toys to children with her brother Mohamed Hammad.
When news of her death online hundreds of comments were left under her posts.
One person wrote: 'What did a little girl do to deserve being killed?'
Another added: 'I'm sorry we couldn't protect you.'
Yaqeen is one of more than 15,000 children reported to have been killed in Gaza since the war began in October 2023, according to local health authorities.
The strike was part of the latest influx of Israeli attacks, which killed 52 people on Monday, including 31 in a school turned shelter that was struck as people slept, igniting their belongings, according to local health officials.
It follows an 11-week blockade on food, fuel, water and medicine, which has pushed the decimated civilian population of Gaza to the brink of famine, experts continue to warn.
The Israeli military said 107 trucks carrying flour and other foodstuffs as well as medical supplies entered the Gaza Strip from the Kerem Shalom crossing point on Thursday.
But getting the supplies to people sheltering in tents and other makeshift accommodation has been fitful and U.N. officials say at least 500 to 600 trucks of aid are needed every day.
Israel imposed the blockade in early March, accusing Hamas of stealing aid meant for civilians. Hamas rejects the charge, saying a number of its own fighters have been killed protecting the trucks from armed looters.
It has announced that a new system, sponsored by the United States and run by private contractors, will soon begin operations from four distribution centres in the south of Gaza, but many details of how the system will work remain unclear.
The U.N. has already said it will not work with the new system, which it says will leave aid distribution conditional on Israel's political and military aims.
Israel has maintained a presence in Gaza since the Hamas-led massacre of October 7, 2023, which saw gunmen storm into southern Israel and kill some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and seize 251 hostages.
It's subsequent ground and air war has left Gaza in ruin, displacing nearly all its residents and killing more than 53,000 people, many of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC Audio  Tom Fletcher
BBC Audio  Tom Fletcher

BBC News

time4 hours ago

  • BBC News

BBC Audio Tom Fletcher

Tom Fletcher heads the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and has been at the forefront of recent efforts to deliver aid into Gaza. Last week, he was criticised for making inaccurate claims about the impact of the Israeli blockade. No stranger to tough jobs, he was previously a foreign policy advisor to three British Prime Ministers and the UK Ambassador to Lebanon as the country dealt with the civil war in neighbouring Syria. He once fought the mayor of Nairobi in a boxing match and had a mortar round land in his swimming pool at the British embassy in Beirut. One of four siblings, he was born in Folkestone, where he attended the Harvey Grammar School before studying at Oxford University. Prior to his UN role he was Principal of Hertford College and has written books on diplomacy as well as novels. Presenter: Mark Coles Producers: Tom Gillett, Lucy Pawle and Jo Casserly Editor: Nick Holland Sound: Gareth Jones Production Coordinator: Sabine Schereck

Elon Musk savages 'idiot' Bono over 'lies' about DOGE on Joe Rogan
Elon Musk savages 'idiot' Bono over 'lies' about DOGE on Joe Rogan

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Elon Musk savages 'idiot' Bono over 'lies' about DOGE on Joe Rogan

Elon Musk unleashed a storm of fury against U2 frontman Bono, branding the rock legend a 'liar' and an 'idiot' after the singer claimed Musk's proposed DOGE cuts to USAID have led to hundreds of thousands of deaths. Appearing on The Joe Rogan Experience on Friday, Bono, 65, whose real name is Paul David Hewson, criticized proposed funding reductions by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a federal body led by Musk that aims to streamline US agencies. The longtime humanitarian claimed the cuts to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) have already resulted in more than 300,000 deaths worldwide, including over 200,000 children suffering from malnutrition, malaria and pneumonia. 'It's not proven, but there is surveillance enough to suggest that 300,000 people have already died from just this cut off, this hard cut, of USAID,' Bono said. He alleged that mass layoffs have left tons of food, water and medical aid undelivered. 'There's food rotting in boats and warehouses,' Bono continued. 'There is 50,000 tons of food that are stored in Djibouti, South Africa, Dubai... that is rotting rather than going to Gaza or Sudan. Because the people who knew the codes for the warehouses [where the food is stored] were fired ... gone. What is that? That's not America, is it?' Musk, clearly incensed, took to X, formerly Twitter, to scorch the U2 frontman. 'He's such a liar/idiot. Zero people have died!' the billionaire Tesla and SpaceX CEO wrote in a now-viral post. But, he didn't stop there - Musk followed up with: 'Got a big one here @lfindRetards.' Later, he posted a clip from South Park titled 'Is Bono the Biggest Piece of Crap in the World?' with the caption 'Bono.' Bono cited a study by Boston University professor Brooke Nichols to support his claims, he also acknowledged concerns about downsizing government but warned that steep cuts to the aid agency are already having dire consequences. 'To destroy, to vandalize, it felt like with glee, that these life support systems were being pulled out of the walls,' Bono said before referencing a story published in Christianity Today. '[One worker said], "We don't have the funds, we have to choose which child to pull off the IVs." It just seems to me, I don't know if "evil" is too strong a word, but what we know about pure evil is that it rejoices in the deaths, in the squandering of human life - particularly children. It actually rejoices in it. And whether it's incompetence, whether it's unintended consequences, it's not too late for people.' Bono added that he raised the issue with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who he said is 'convinced people aren't dying yet.' Rogan, 57, then challenged Bono's position, describing USAID as a 'money-laundering operation' that has lost even a 'trillion' dollars with 'no oversight, no receipts.' While the organization has faced credible accusations of waste and fraud, such cases are believed to represent only a small portion of its $40 billion budget. Still, the Trump administration placed most USAID workers on leave in February after Musk declared it a 'criminal organization' and said it was 'time to die.' That said, Rogan acknowledged the humanitarian necessity of USAID's work. 'We help the world, and when you're talking about making wells for people in the Congo to get fresh water, when you're talking about food and medicine to places that don't have access - no way that should have been cut out. And that should have been clear before they make these radical cuts. There's got to be a way to keep aid and not have fraud.' Rogan also noted, 'The ironic thing is, even though Elon Musk has proposed all these things and the DOGE committee has proposed all these things, they've made no cuts in terms of the budget. They've cut nothing.' Musk and Rubio's insistence that 'zero people have died' may refer to the fact that the 300,000 figure is a projection, not a confirmed death toll. In the Christianity Today article Bono referenced, aid workers acknowledged recent cuts and warned that child deaths could soon follow. 'I do think we can expect to see increased mortality rates, increased infection, and increased despair if things aren't corrected,' one worker reportedly said. However, Nichols, the infectious disease expert who authored the projection, told The Times UK that tens of thousands likely have already died. 'Because I've been doing HIV [research] for so long, I just assumed that would be where the biggest impact would occur,' she said. 'But I was really shocked by the child deaths from diarrhea, pneumonia and malnutrition. Tens of thousands of children have died because we've pulled out our funding from diarrhea, pneumonia and food programs.' While there is debate about how many have already died, experts widely agree that the proposed 80 percent reduction in USAID's budget will be catastrophic if fully implemented or left unaddressed. Previously, Bill Gates also criticized Musk for the proposed cuts, telling The Financial Times, 'The picture of the world's richest man killing the world's poorest children is not a pretty one.' The controversy comes amid Musk stepping down from his official White House role and a New York Times report alleging that he took large quantities of ketamine and other drugs while overseeing DOGE. Musk has denied the claims, calling the report 'bs' and saying his packed schedule would make such behavior impossible. Also during the Friday podcast, Bono warned against the Trump administration's broader isolationist stance. 'I just want to remind Americans of the size of their country, and I'm not talking about the geography,' he said. 'The size of the idea, it's just an extraordinary thing. It's an idea big enough to fit the whole world, and when it becomes an island rather than a continent … when it shrinks, America seems to stop being America.'

Terror group Hamas claims it is ready to release hostages in a bid to end the war in Gaza
Terror group Hamas claims it is ready to release hostages in a bid to end the war in Gaza

The Sun

time4 hours ago

  • The Sun

Terror group Hamas claims it is ready to release hostages in a bid to end the war in Gaza

HAMAS has said that it is ready to release hostages in a bid to end the war in Gaza. The move by the terror group is part of a response to a US ceasefire proposal. Hamas said it would release ten living hostages and 18 bodies in return for Israel's release of a number of Palestinian prisoners. Hamas said: 'This proposal aims to achieve a permanent ceasefire, (Israeli) withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and ensure the flow of aid to our people and families.' There was no immediate response from Israel to the statement. But PM Benjamin Netanyahu had last week told families of the hostages they had accepted the US proposals. It comes as Gaza health officials said yesterday that 14 people had been killed and 284 injured in the past day. It said the territory's entire population was at risk of famine. Displaced Palestinians living in tents were handed food by aid agencies. Women and children were among those gathered in Khan Yunis holding pots and pans. Jens Laerke, of the UN's humanitarian agency, said it was the only area on the planet where 100 per cent of the population was at risk of famine. He added: 'Gaza is the hungriest place on Earth.' Death of Hamas chief Mohammad Sinwar could cause DECIMATED terror group to implode 1

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store