Hamas seeks changes in Gaza proposal
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The embattled Israeli-backed aid group that began operating in Gaza earlier this week is not screening Palestinians at aid distribution sites, despite Israeli officials saying that additional security measures were a core reason for the creation of the new program.
He was the younger brother of Yahya Sinwar, the former Hamas leader killed by Israel last year. Hamas did not immediately respond to the claim of his death.
The longtime Democrat has emerged as an understated figure in the White House's efforts to end the war in Gaza.
At least 21 people were killed as they went to receive aid from an Israeli-backed foundation, Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHP), in the Gaza Strip, according to a nearby hospital run by the Red Cross.
Hamas is warning desperate Palestinians from heading to the controversial US-backed food distribution sites in Gaza, which saw chaos erupt upon opening Tuesday as thousands of hungry Gazans
Megha Vemuri called out MIT for having research ties with the Israeli army and "aiding and abetting" the country with its "assault on the Palestinian people."
With the U.S. announcing Israel has accepted a new proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Hamas, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip expressed their hope the war would come to an end, saying that death and starvation are spreading fast in the besieged enclave.
Elise Stefanik says Harvard pro-Palestinian activist should lose federally funded Truman scholarship
Stefanik also called on the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation to review its program for "ideological and political bias."