Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Abigail Suzanne Martin (born September 6, 1984) is an American journalist, [2] [3] TV presenter, and activist. She helped found the citizen journalism website Media Roots and serves on the board of directors for the Media Freedom Foundation which manages Project Censored .
After the Oslo Accords had failed to bring peace between Israel and Palestine, believing Western leaders were no longer committed in holding Israel accountable for the allegations against human rights, Palestinian human right activists conceived a new peaceful movement to boycott Israel, for example, through refusal to buy any goods from Israel, in particular those made in the Israeli-occupied ...
PHOTO Illustration: American-Israeli hostages that may be included in the ceasefire-release agreement include Sagui Dekel-Chen, 36, Keith Siegel, 65, and Edan Alexander, 20.
A video clip surfacing following what has been described as a "massacre" depicts a man walking through several rooms where dozens of corpses can be seen, and distress can be heard throughout the school. [6] The second strike killed at least 50 people. [7] Martin Griffiths stated the strike was "tragic news" and that "Shelters are a place for ...
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, ... USA TODAY. Female owned floral studio spreads love and free roses before Valentine’s Day.
Videos of the protest posted on social media show the larger crowd, of about 200 seemingly mostly white young people, surrounding and shouting down the multi-racial group of between 30 and 60 pro ...
[11] [12] Palestinians in Germany described facing repression from authorities when they attempted to protest in support of Palestine, being subject to crackdowns, arrests and possible racial profiling. [13] [14] On 18 October, a video of German police stomping out a candlelight vigil for dead Palestinians was seen circulating on social media. [15]
Amer was born in Kuwait after his parents had been displaced from Palestine in the 1948 Nakba, in which around 750,000 Palestinians were expelled from their homeland in the creation of Israel.