Yahya Sinwar, a key Hamas leader, has been labeled as the architect of the deadly October 7th attacks on Israel. This documentary traces his rise from imprisonment to political and military leadership,
A new video showing now-deceased Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar wandering around southern Gaza with his head covered in some kind of blanket has been published. Appearing like Gandalf from The Lord of ...
Mohammed Sinwar, the younger brother of slain Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, has risen to a crucial leadership role within Hamas. Amidst Israel's ongoing military attacks, Mohammed has been instrumental in rebuilding the group and retaining its influence over Gaza.
NEW chilling footage appears to show the terrorist leader Yahya Sinwar directing Hamas from the rubble of Gaza before he was killed. Yahya Sinwar was the bloodthirsty mastermind behind the October
Slain Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar can be seen wearing a military vest and a blanket as he walks on the battleground in a walking stick
The owner of the house, where Israeli forces purportedly killed Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar last year, says his apartment in Gaza’s southern city of Rafah has become a macabre tourist attraction for admirers of the militant leader.
Hamas faces an uncertain future post-ceasefire, grappling with leadership losses, declining foreign support, and strained relations with Palestinian factions. Amid pragmatic concessions and resistance rhetoric,
Yahya Sinwar’s recitation of Shawqi’s iconic verse in the battlefields of Palestine underscores the enduring struggle for freedom, drawing parallels between historical and contemporary resistance.
Al Jazeera network has aired unseen footage of Yahya Sinwar - under whose leadership Hamas had carried out its 2023 attack - three months after he was killed during an Israeli operation in Gaza.
Days after it killed Yahya Sinwar, the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) on Saturday released a new footage of the slain Hamas chief, who masterminded the October 7, 2023, terrorist attacks in Israel.
Urgence Palestine reportedly shared an announcement for Wikipedia editors to join “the Palestine contributors club.”
In his writings before the war, Alshannat admired Western democracy, condemned suicide bombings and yearned for Arabs and Jews to live in peace and harmony. With the ceasefire, he is now trying to recover the bodies of relatives and bury them.