Israeli Battalion Officer Linked in The Killing of Little Hind Tank-Torched in Lebanon   

By Dr Marwan Asmar

CROSSFIREARABIA – Commander of the contentious 52nd Battalion which was involved in the killing of a six-year-old girl in Gaza was torched in his tank in southern Lebanon.

Lieutenant Colonel Dor Gadalia Ben-Simhon, 32 years old was one of the four Israeli soldiers killed in Lebanon, Friday morning, as their tank was targeted during clashes with Hezbollah forces in southern Lebanon an Israeli army statement announced.

The tank was set alight as a result of a rocket where the soldiers inside perished. The battalion that belonged to the Israeli 401st Armored Brigade has always been involved in controversy as Ben-Simhon is the fourth commander of this battalion to be killed and/or wounded, according to The Times of Israel.

But the curse started on 29 January 2024 when officers of the battalion were responsible for the killing of six-year-old Palestinian girl Hind Rajab in the Gaza Strip that was witnessing one of the worst genocides against it since living memory.

In April 2026, Daniel Ella, the previous commander of the 52nd Battalion, was called up to assume temporary duties during the offensive in southern Lebanon after the previous commander was also wounded through intense fighting with Hezbollah forces.

The reappearance of Ella brought to mind one of the most horrific war crimes committed by Israel in its two-year genocide in Gaza, which began soon after 7 October 2023.

The story of the killing of little Hind will indeed serve as a stain on the notion of professional soldiering in Israel for she and her relatives were killed in cold blood as they hastily travelled on 29 January 2024, from the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood, south of Gaza City as the Israeli army targeted a car they were in.

She remained trapped inside the vehicle amidst the five bodies of her aunt, uncle and four nieces. They were all killed instantly except for one 15-year-old niece called Layan, though she died later whilst talking to an officer from the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) on an attempt to rescue them.

In those hours a two-man Palestinian team finally persuaded the Israelis to be allowed to rescue Hind and Layan but in the end didn’t succeed and were killed. The ambulance that was standing bye was also blown up by one of the tanks that were near and the men inside it also killed.

The child was found dead in the car 12 days later with the vehicle riddled with 335 bullets from Israeli tanks and armoured vehicles. After her cousin was killed, also by a direct bullet, the six-year-old picked up the phone and started pleading to one of the officers. The conversation lasted for three hours until the line went dead. That is when she and the two officers – Yousef Zeino and Ahmad Al Madhoun – were fired upon again and killed. Despite military coordination an Israeli tank fired on the ambulance and went up in flames.

In May 2025, the Hind Rajab Foundation announced it filed a complaint with the International Criminal Court against Ella and the commander of the 401st Armored Brigade, Colonel Benny Aharon, accusing them of war crimes and holding them responsible for the death of Hind who was killed alone in the car surrounded by the limp bodies of family relatives.

According to The Times of Israel, Ella was wounded in Gaza in July 2024 while commanding the same 52nd battalion. He was replaced by Lieutenant Colonel Yehuda Shalev, who was seriously wounded in October of the same year. The battalion’s commander was later wounded in Lebanon. The Israeli Channel 14 referred to him only as “A” last April.

Since October 2023, Ella commanded the 52 Battalion three times following the wounding of its previous commander during the offensives on Gaza and later in Lebanon, as per Channel 14.

An investigation by Al Jazeera last October 2025 revealed the names of the Israeli soldiers, including Ella and Aharon, involved in the killing of Hind, her family, and the paramedics who tried to save her.

The killing of Hind is one of thousands of crimes committed by the Israeli army in its genocidal war on Gaza. This is a war that has been openly and blatantly supported by the United States, which left more than 73,000 Palestinians dead and over 173,000 wounded, most of them children and women, and destroyed 90 percent of the infrastructure.

Despite the ceasefire agreement that took effect since 10 October, 2025, Israel continues its vicious campaign through a persistent siege and daily bombardment that killed 1,007 Palestinians and injured 3,165. These are mostly children and women, in addition to causing widespread destruction.

Israel also prevents the entry of agreed-upon quantities of food, medicine, medical supplies, shelter materials, and prefabricated housing into Gaza, where some 2.4 million Palestinians, including 1.9 million displaced persons, are living in catastrophic conditions.

In 1948, Israel was established on land occupied by armed Zionist militias who committed massacres and displaced at least 750,000 Palestinians. Tel Aviv then occupied the remaining Palestinian territories and refused to withdraw or allow the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Parts of this feature is based on an Anadolu news agency report in Arabic posted  in  crossfirearabia.com

Continue reading
Little Hind Rajab: Killed by Israeli Bullets

On the second anniversary of Israel’s killing of five-year-old Hind Rajab who pleaded by phone to be rescued during the Gaza genocide, human rights organizations and advocates have renewed their calls for accountability and justice for Palestinians amid Israel’s ongoing attacks.

On January 29, 2024, Hind was killed while trying to flee to safety after the car she was traveling in with her relatives was fired on by an Israeli tank. Everyone in the vehicle was killed except Hind and her 15-year-old cousin, Layan, who called the Palestinian Red Crescent begging for help.

Layan was killed shortly after, leaving Hind alone on the line.

Two medics dispatched in a clearly marked Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance to rescue her were also targeted by Israeli tank fire as they approached. Despite coordinating their route with Israeli forces and maintaining direct contact during the mission, their ambulance was struck, killing both medics instantly. The destroyed vehicle was later found near the site where Hind’s car had been attacked with 335 bullet holes.

A recording of the phone call was widely shared on social media after her death, causing renewed international outrage over Israel’s attacks on civilians.

Rajab is heard sobbing and telling the Red Crescent Society, “Please come to me, please come. I’m scared”, while bullets were fired in the background.

Hind’s mother, Wissam Hamada, said, “The whole world has left us to die, to go hungry, to live in fear and to be forcibly displaced without doing anything.”

In June 2024, Al Jazeera investigated the attack, providing a detailed reconstruction of the incident, in collaboration with nonprofit investigative groups Forensic Architecture and Earshot and revealed that an Israeli tank was just 13 to 23 metres (42 to 75 feet) away when it opened fire on Rajab’s car.

Moreover, a United Nations report in July 2024 found, citing forensic analysis, that Rajab’s car was shot at from “very close range using a type of weapon that can only be attributed to the Israeli forces”.

Marking the second anniversary, the The Hind Rajab Foundation, a Belgium-based pro-Palestine group which leads a legal push against Israeli soldiers’ war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza and was named after the five-year-old child , said, “Many — including Israeli leaders and the thousands of soldiers and officers under their command — act as if justice will never catch up with the crimes Israel commits. Many believe the relentless assault on the universal values enshrined in international law will continue without consequence.”

“We build files. We compile forensics. We gather testimony. We track perpetrators. We prepare arrests, extraditions, and charges.

The pathway from filing a case to conviction is arduous.”

“This does not mean justice will never be served. It means justice is a process — and we, the lawyers, advocates, and war-criminal hunters, will not be deterred.”

Social media activists shared posts recalling Hind’s final moments, along with her photographs, accompanied by messages of ‘Rest in peace’ and ‘Never Forget’.

Amnesty International said, “Hind is one of the at least 20,179 children who have been killed by Israeli forces in Gaza since October 2023 – according to the latest reports from the United Nations. The real figure is likely much higher.”

“Justice for Hind Rajab requires not only her killers to be brought to justice. The architects of the genocide in Gaza must be held accountable too. Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant must face trial at the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity,” according to the Quds News Network.

Continue reading
Kids of The Gaza Holocaust

By Nour Dawood

Since October 2023, when Israel launched its genocidal war in Gaza, over 16,800 children have been killed. Behind each staggering statistic lies a name, a face, a story. These children had dreams, hopes, families who loved them, and futures that will never unfold. Israel may claim military objectives, but the reality on the ground reveals children at the heart of its devastation.


Here, we honor the stories of 20 children whose lives were brutally cut short. Their stories have been pieced together through interviews with their families, social media posts, and news reports. These are not just numbers. They are names, stories, and tragedies that must not be forgotten.

Aya and Aboud Abu Oun (6 and 5 years old)

Siblings Aya and Aboud Abu Oun were killed on October 17. Their mother, Asmaa Mughari, shared their memory with heartbreaking tributes on social media. Aboud, her youngest, had picked out a jacket he was excited to wear but never got the chance. His love for drawing was so strong that the family kept searching the rubble of their home, hoping to find any of his sketches. “I keep asking them if they found anything,” Asmaa shared.


In another post, Asmaa celebrated Aya’s first graduation certificate. “It was your first achievement in school, and I’m so proud of you—both in life and in death,” she wrote, expressing the unbearable pride and loss every parent hopes never to experience.

Hind Rajab (6 years old)

On January 29, six-year-old Hind Rajab was killed when an Israeli tank fired at her family’s car in Tal Al-Hawa. According to the UN’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), forensic evidence confirmed that the shots came from close range. Hind was trapped among the bodies of her family members for hours, crying for help over the phone in her final moments.


Her mother, Wissam Hamadah, shared the agony of not being able to save her. “My sweetheart, I couldn’t reach you. Forgive me,” she tearfully recounted. Hind’s body was recovered days later, along with two paramedics who had been killed while trying to rescue her.

Juman Fahem Husnin (13 years old)

Juman was a bright, ambitious 13-year-old who excelled in school and Islamic studies, even memorizing the Quran. She had dreams, especially of peace, hoping for a day when her family would be reunited without the fear of war. On her birthday, December 1, she expressed this wish, but just six days later, an Israeli missile struck her home, killing her, her two sisters, Yaman and Bisan, and wiping out most of her family.


Her aunt shared a deeply emotional tribute: “The missile erased them from our civil registry, but not from our hearts. Juman’s smile, her kind eyes, remain untouched, even by war.”

Mohammed and Zeina Hijazi (4 and 2 years old)

Mohammed and Zeina Hijazi were displaced from their home in northern Gaza to Deir Al-Balah, seeking refuge from relentless bombings. But even in displacement, they found no safety. On December 23, Israeli airstrikes killed both children. Their father remembered Mohammed’s love for simple joys—cake on his birthday, mulukhiyah, and shawarma. “He was so excited to start kindergarten, but instead, he joined the kindergarten of paradise.”


Zeina, only two years old, adored her older brother. She would often tease him by pulling his hair, but they were inseparable. “When Zeina took her first steps, Mohammed was the one who excitedly shared the news with our family,” their father recalled. “Now, they walk together in paradise.”

Laya Naim (3 years old)

Laya was a lively three-year-old with a love for staying up late, dancing, and playing in the water. On January 6, she was killed in Gaza City by an Israeli airstrike. Her mother, Asma Naim, shared her grief through poignant words: “You loved everything about life—parties, swimming, strawberries. I can’t grasp that you’re gone.”


The memory of Laya’s blue dress, her messy hair, and her infectious joy lives on in her mother’s heart. “You loved your father so much, and you looked just like him,” Asma shared, her pain reflected in every word.

Yousef Abu Mousa (7 years old)

Known for his big heart and his habit of initiating family group hugs, Yousef was a joyful presence in his home. His father remembers how Yousef would always ask about his work hours and excitedly greet him when he came home. “Every time I went to work, he’d run to me, hug me, and kiss me. He was always the first one there,” his father shared.


On October 15, an Israeli airstrike hit their family home, taking Yousef’s young life. His father’s pain is immeasurable: “I lost everything, but the biggest loss was my son Yousef.”

Habiba Abd El-Qader (9 years old)

Habiba, a talented young girl, excelled at school and loved painting. She had dreams of becoming a doctor, but those dreams were destroyed when an Israeli airstrike hit her home on October 25. Her mother, Feda’a Murjan, begged for an end to the bloodshed. “Please stop all of this. My Habiba is gone, and I don’t want more mothers to go through this pain.”

Abdullah and Mahmoud Abu Salima (15 years old)

Twins Abdullah and Mahmoud were avid soccer players with dreams of representing Palestine on the national team. Abdullah hoped to become a defender, while Mahmoud aspired to be a goalkeeper. Their connection was more than just brotherly love—they shared the same passion, the same goals. Mahmoud would often proudly declare that he was “seconds” older than his brother.


On October 23, their dreams were shattered when an airstrike killed both boys, their mother, and several other family members.

Reem Nabhan (3 years old)

Reem was the apple of her grandfather Khaled’s eye. He lovingly called her “the soul of the soul” and, even during the war, would bike long distances just to get her favorite foods like ketchup. “Reem was a part of my life,” Khaled told Anadolu Agency, his voice breaking as he recounted how an Israeli airstrike struck their home.

“I found myself buried under the rubble,” he said. “I suffered bruises, and my daughter was injured, but worst of all, we lost Reem and Tariq, my beloved grandchildren. My other son and daughter were also wounded.”

His dreams of seeing Reem grow up, go to university, and turn to him for advice on her future were shattered. “She was my light,” he added.

Salma Jaber (4 years old)

Salma was the spirited middle child between her older sister, Sarah, and her younger brother, Omar. On December 5, as their family tried to flee northern Gaza for safety, Salma ran towards her father, a photographer working for UNRWA, when she was shot and killed. “My three-year-old son, Omar, still asks me where Salma is,” Hussein Jaber told Al Jazeera. “He doesn’t understand how she could have been walking beside him, and now she’s just gone.”

Her absence haunts the family as they struggle to explain the incomprehensible to a child who can only remember her as a constant, loving presence.

Mahmoud Al-Dahdouh (15 years old)

Affectionately called “Little Wael” after his father, veteran Al Jazeera correspondent Wael Al-Dahdouh, Mahmoud was determined to follow in his father’s footsteps. During the war, he and his sister Kholoud posted videos documenting Gaza’s suffering, pleading for help. “There is no safe place in Gaza. This is the fiercest war we’ve ever known,” they said in one video.

On October 25, Mahmoud’s life was cut short along with his mother, his seven-year-old sister, Sham, and his infant nephew, Adam, in an Israeli airstrike on Nuseirat refugee camp. Twenty-one others perished with them.

Mahmoud’s dream of becoming a journalist and sharing Gaza’s story with the world died that day, but his voice lives on through the videos he courageously shared.

Lauren Al-Koumi (2 years old)

Lauren was the “long-awaited joy” of her family. Her uncle, Akram Hassan, mourned the niece he adored before ever holding her. “For the first and last time, I became an uncle. Lauren’s laughter stole our hearts. She was the family’s fruit, as her grandfather lovingly called her.”

Lauren’s potential was limitless. “She might have grown up to be an engineer like her father, or a teacher like her mother. She could have been a beauty icon, but the oppressive machinery of the occupier stole her from us.”

Akram’s heartache pours through his words as he reflects on all the moments he’ll never share with his beloved niece.

Yousef Shahada (5 years old)

Yousef, known for his striking green eyes, was just starting kindergarten when his life was cut short. He was killed along with his mother Du’aa and his only brother Musab, and their father followed them as a martyr ten months later.

Yousef’s mother, devastated by her loss, spoke through tears. “He’s not a number. My son has a name. People must know the names of our martyrs.”

Tala Abu Ajwa (10 years old)

Tala was just a child, joyfully playing outside in her pink roller skates when tragedy struck. Her father, Hussam, recounted the devastating moment: “At 5 p.m., Tala finally convinced her mother to let her go outside. A few minutes later, two massive explosions rocked our building. I rushed downstairs, and the first thing I saw was her pink roller skate, barely visible under the rubble.”

Tala was covered in blood, struggling for her last breath. The pink roller skate, once a symbol of her innocent joy, became a haunting reminder of what the war had taken from her family.

Khaled Al-Shawa (17 years old)

Khaled was riding his bike when he was killed in a targeted attack meant for Al Jazeera journalist Ismail al-Ghoul and cameraman Rami al-Rifi. His mother’s voice cracked as she spoke to Al Jazeera: “He’s not a number. My son has a name, and everyone must know it.”

Khaled wasn’t just a victim of war; he was a boy who cared for his family and neighbors. Every day, he carried food in his backpack to deliver to an elderly neighbor and his injured son, a small act of kindness that now carries the weight of an unimaginable loss.

Ziad Sidam (3 years old)

Ziad was just 3 years old when an Israeli airstrike tore through his family home in the Nuseirat refugee camp. His father, consumed by grief, shared his heart-wrenching final moments. “I tried to protect you, son, but I couldn’t. I did everything I could, but it wasn’t enough.”

As Ziad’s father rushed him to the hospital, he realized his son was dying in the car. “Tell God how scared you were when the bombs fell, Ziad. Tell Him everything, my love. You used to talk about everything.”

These stories are just a fraction of the thousands of children whose lives have been stolen. These children are not numbers. They are stories, memories, and bright futures that Israel has erased. We will continue to say their names, share their stories, and never allow their humanity to be lost in the statistics.

This article is reprinted from the Quds News Network

Continue reading
‘War Criminal’, ‘Guilty in Genocide’

Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib representing Detroit had this to say for Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu when he was addressing the US Congress, Tuesday.

Her image continues to trend, setting with all the other Congressmen and Congresswomen as if this was the most natural thing in the world with signs of “War Criminal” and “Guilty in Genocide” staring Netanyahu in the face.

In protest of Netanyahu’s visit to Congress, activists in Washington dyed multiple fountains around Capitol Hill with red and projections cast demanding the arrest of war criminal Netanyahu.

Tlaib had wrote: “Netanyahu is a war criminal committing genocide against the Palestinian people. It is utterly disgraceful that leaders from both parties have invited him to address Congress. He should be arrested and sent to the International Criminal Court.”

In a statement on her website she clarified: “Since 1948, the US has provided more than $141 billion in weapons to the Israeli government to fund the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, including $17.9 billion since October.

Netanyahu’s apartheid regime has already slaughtered over 39,000 Palestinians in Gaza, including 15,000 children. Yet my colleagues and the Biden administration continue to approve more funding and send more weapons – even as innocent children like Hind Rajab are targeted with 355 bullets, shot in the heart by Israeli sniper, burned to death in their tents with US-made weapon, bombed while playing at school, deliberately starved to death, and Palestinians are bombed in refugee camps and discovered in mass graves, naked and with their hands tied, all live-streamed for the world to see.

These are undeniably wore crimes under international law.

 Make no mistake: This event is a celebration of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. It is a sad day for our democracy when my colleagues will smile for a photo op with a man who is actively committing genocide.

It is hypocritical to claim to be concerned about the massive death toll of innocent civilians, and then turn around and welcome the person responsible for these war crimes to our Capitol. Their silence is betrayal, and history will remember them accordingly.

Our government must stop supporting and funding this genocide now,” Tlaib ends by saying.

Continue reading