Compilation of news reports – IAK staff
15,613 children have been confirmed murdered by the Jews, 31 per cent of the martyrs in the Jews' Gaza Mega Concentration Camp for indigenous Gentiles, which stands at 50,082 – this from the Palestinian Ministry of Health. That comes to more than 29 a day. Their names are available here.
NOTE: This number represents those children who have been identified, and is not the total number murdered by the Jews. Thousands have yet to be named and/or recovered from under debris, thousands more are unidentifiable after being blown to pieces and sometimes bludgeoned unrecognisable by the Jews.
The Jews murdered at least 65 people in Gaza on Monday. Among the dead were two beloved journalists: Al Jazeera reporter Hossam Shabat, and Mohammad Mansour.
The health ministry in Gaza said that at least 792 people had been murdered in the week since the Jews resumed bombardments.
The Jews have ordered a new forced displacement of Palestinians from Jabaliya in northern Gaza.

Israel kills Al Jazeera and Palestine Today journalists in separate attacks in Gaza
Israel killed two Palestinian journalists in separate attacks in Gaza on Monday, bringing the total number of press workers killed in the Palestinian territory since October 2023 to 208.
Palestine Today correspondent Mohammad Mansour was killed in an air strike north of Khan Younis while Al Jazeera Mubasher correspondent Hussam Shabat was hit in his car in Salah al-Din Street in the north of the enclave.
The Government Media Office in the Gaza Strip said it condemned “in the strongest terms the targeting, killing, and assassination of Palestinian journalists by the Israeli occupation”.
It urged media watchdogs to condemn “these systematic crimes against Palestinian journalists and media professionals in Gaza”.
The statement added that the Gaza government held Israel, the United States, as well as “the countries participating in the genocide, such as the United Kingdom, Germany, and France, fully responsible for committing this heinous crime” (continue reading here).
Palestinian journalist killed by Israeli strike in Gaza leaves pre-written message
Hossam Shabat, a Palestinian journalist killed by Israel in the Gaza Strip, who spent 18 months documenting Israel’s war on Gaza, left a pre-written message to be shared after his death, urging his readers to “keep fighting, keep telling our stories – until Palestine is free”.
“If you’re reading this, it means I have been killed – most likely targeted – by the Israeli occupation forces,” Shabat’s message read.
He goes on to detail how his college life and dreams were shattered by the war and explains his decision to document Israel’s war as he slept on the streets and endured hunger and Israeli shelling.
“By God, I fulfilled my duty as a journalist. I risked everything to report the truth, and now, I am finally at rest – something I haven’t known in the past 18 months,” he wrote.
“I did all this because I believe in the Palestinian cause. I believe this land is ours, and it has been the highest honor of my life to die defending it and serving its people,” he added.
The message was shared on X by “Hossam’s team.”
Palestinian Oscar winner missing after being severely beaten by Israeli settlers
Palestinian film director and Academy Award-winner Hamdan Ballal was violently attacked by what his colleague described as a “lynch mob” of Israeli settlers on Monday night in the Palestinian village of Susya, south of Hebron in the occupied West Bank.
Susya is also the site of an Israeli settlement, which is illegal under international law and something most American administrations have agreed violates Article 49 of the Geneva Convention.
Ballal’s whereabouts are now unknown after Israeli soldiers then seized him from the ambulance that arrived to treat him, his co-director and fellow Oscar winner of the documentary No Other Land, Yuval Abraham, said on X.
Abraham, a journalist for +972 magazine, said in a separate post featuring a shaky cell phone video that masked settlers “attacked Hamdan’s village, they continued to attack American activists, breaking their car with stones”.
Basel Adra, the Palestinian resident of Masafer Yatta whose story is told in the film, said on Monday that he was “standing with Karam, Hamdan’s 7 year old son, near the blood of Hamdan’s in his house, after settlers lynched him”.
Ballal “is still missing after soldiers abducted him, injured and bleeding”, Adra said (continue reading here).
The Israeli army confirmed on Monday that it had arrested Palestinian film director and Academy Award-winner Hamdan Ballal “for throwing stones.”
RELATED: Israel aims to kill a Palestinian football ‘revolution’ — along with its players

UN to ‘reduce footprint’ in Gaza citing Israeli attacks on staff
The UN announced on 24 March it would “reduce its footprint” in the Gaza Strip after an Israeli tank strike hit one of its compounds last week, killing one staffer and wounding five others.
In a statement Monday, UN Secretary-General spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said that the UN “has made taken the difficult decision to reduce the Organization’s footprint in Gaza, even as humanitarian needs soar.”
He said the UN “is not leaving Gaza” but would withdraw one-third of its approximately 100 international staffers from the strip.
In addition, five staff members of the United Nations Palestinian relief agency, UNRWA, were killed last week, the agency’s Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini said on Thursday.
“In the past few days, another five UNRWA staff have been confirmed killed, bringing the death toll to 284. They were teachers, doctors, and nurses: serving the most vulnerable,” he said in a statement posted on X.

Israel refuses to coordinate rescue operation for Palestinian paramedics trapped in Rafah
US deflects questions on Israeli killings of journalists in Gaza, blames Hamas
The US State Department on Monday deflected questions about the killings of two journalists in Israeli attacks on Gaza, including Al Jazeera’s Hossam Shabat, placing blame on Hamas.
“I would say that every single thing that’s happening is a result of Hamas and its choices to drag that region down into a level of suffering that has been excruciating and has caused innumerable deaths,” Tammy Bruce told reporters during a press briefing.
Bruce further reiterated US support for Israel, stating that Washington stands by Israel’s “needs as it defends itself.”
She framed Hamas as an entity that has “destroyed lives for generations and continues to.”
Pressed on whether the killing of journalists could be considered a war crime, Bruce declined to provide a direct answer, instead attributed responsibility for all events in Gaza to Hamas.
“I’m not going to stand here and declare what’s a war crime and what isn’t,” she said. “But what we do know is a crime is the mass slaughter of any individuals, certainly the targeting of people simply because of who they are.”
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