To the outside world, they were a physician, a journalist. No one suspected their apartment had become a prison.


The 73-year-old general practitioner Ahmad Al-Jamal was a fixture of his community.

He worked mornings at a public clinic in the Gaza Strip refugee camp of Nuseirat and afternoons at his own small private clinic, where residents turned to him for procedures such as circumcisions. He also was an imam at a local mosque, where he was known for his beautiful voice when reciting the Quran.

But for the past several months, when he finished his duties each day, he would return home to the apartment he shared with his son, his daughter-in-law and their children—and the three Israeli hostages they were hiding there for Hamas.

    • DolphinMath@slrpnk.netOP
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      5 months ago

      If you read the WSJ article, it relies largely on interviews with Palestinians who were neighbors.

      The author, Abeer Ayyoub, Is also a Palestinian from Gaza.

      I’ll read the CNN article when I have a moment.

      Edit: Had a moment and read the article. Best I can gather the CNN snippet you posted relies entirely on a Twitter/X post from the chairman of the Euro Med Monitor?

      • ralphio@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        What Euro Med said was also based on the testimony of locals. Sounds like he said she said and since the IDF destroyed all the buildings in that area it’ll be tough to prove definitely.