person:jaber

  • Names and ages of Palestinians killed by Israeli troops in Gaza

    These are the names of the unarmed Palestinians shot dead by Israeli troops since Friday 30 March, 2018. They were protesting at the Gaza border for the right of return to their ancestral lands and homes, from which they were driven out in 1948. The list does not include the many thousands wounded by live fire.

    Name and age of victims :
    01. Omar Wahid Samour, 31 years old
    02. Mohammed Kamal al-Najjar, 25 years old
    03. Jihad Zuhair Abu Jamous, 30 years old
    04. Amin Mansour Abu Muammar, 22 years old
    05. Ibrahim Salah Abu Sha’er, 17 years old
    06. Nagy Abdullah Abu Hjeir, 25 years old
    07. Musab Zuhair Al-Soloul, 23 years old
    08. Abd al-Qader Mardi al-Hawajri, 42 years old
    09. Mahmoud Saadi Rahmi, 23 years old
    10. Mohammed Naeem Abu Amro, 26.
    11. Ahmed Ibrahim Ashour Odeh, 19.
    12. Jihad Ahmed Farina, 34 years old
    13. Abdel-Fattah Abdel-Nabi, 18 years old
    14. Bader Fayiq al-Sabbagh, 22 years old
    15. Sari Walid Abu Odeh, 27 years old
    16. Hamdan Isma’il Abu Amsha, 23 years old
    17. Fares Al-Ruqab, 29 years old
    18. Ahmad Omar Arafah, 25 years old
    19. Osama Khamis Qdeih, 38 years old
    20. Majdi Ramadan Shabat, 38 years old
    21. Hussein Muhammad Adnan Madi, 13 years old
    22. Subhi Abu Atawi, 20 years old
    23. Mohammad Said al-Haj-Saleh, 33 years old
    24. Sedqi Faraj Abu Atawi, 45 years old
    25. Alaa al-Din Yahya Ismail al-Zamli, 15 years old
    26. Hamza Abd al-Al, 20 years old
    27. Yaser Murtaja, 30 years old
    28. Ibrahim Al-‘ur, 19 years old
    29. Mujahed Nabil Al-Khudari, 25 years old
    30. Marwan Odeh Qdeih, 45 years old
    31. Mohammed Hjeila, 30 years old
    32. Abdallah Al-Shahri, 28 years old
    33. Tahrir Wahba, 17 years old
    34. Saad Abu Taha, 29 years old
    35. Mohammed Ayoub, 15 years old
    36. Ahmed Abu Hussein, 25 years old
    37. Abdullah Shamali, 20 years old
    38. Ahmad Rashad Al Athamna, 23 years old
    39. Ahmed Nabil Aqel, 25 years old
    40. Mahmoud Wahba, 18 years old
    41. Ahmed Dabour, 23 years old
    42. Ayed Hamaydeh, 23 years old
    43, Amjad Qartous, 18 years old
    44. Hesham Abdul-Al, 22 years old
    45. Abd al-Salam Bakr, 29 years old
    46. Mohammed Amin al-Maqeer, 21 years old
    47. Khalil Na’im Mustafa Atallah, 22 years old
    48. Azzam Oweida, 15 years old
    49. Anas Shawqi, 19 years old
    50. Jaber Salem Abu Mustafa, 40 years old
    51. Amin Mahmoud Muammar, 26 years old
    52. Hani Fayez al-Ardarba, 23 years old
    53. Mohammed Khaled Abu Reida, 20 years old
    54. Jamal Abu Arahman Afaneh, 15 years old
    55. Laila Anwar Al-Ghandoor, 8 months old
    56. Ezz el-din Musa Mohamed Alsamaak, 14 years old
    57. Wisaal Fadl Ezzat Alsheikh Khalil, 15 years old
    58. Ahmed Adel Musa Alshaer, 16 years old
    59. Saeed Mohamed Abu Alkheir, 16 years old
    60. Ibrahim Ahmed Alzarqa, 18 years old
    61. Eman Ali Sadiq Alsheikh, 19 years old
    62. Zayid Mohamed Hasan Omar, 19 years old
    63. Motassem Fawzy Abu Louley, 20 years old
    64. Anas Hamdan Salim Qadeeh, 21 years old
    65. Mohamed Abd Alsalam Harz, 21 years old
    66. Yehia Ismail Rajab Aldaqoor, 22 years old
    67. Mustafa Mohamed Samir Mahmoud Almasry, 22 years old
    68. Ezz Eldeen Nahid Aloyutey, 23 years old
    69. Mahmoud Mustafa Ahmed Assaf, 23 years old
    70. Ahmed Fayez Harb Shahadah, 23 years old
    71. Ahmed Awad Allah, 24 years old
    72. Khalil Ismail Khalil Mansor, 25 years old
    73. Mohamed Ashraf Abu Sitta, 26 years old
    74. Bilal Ahmed Abu Diqah, 26 years old
    75. Ahmed Majed Qaasim Ata Allah, 27 years old
    76. Mahmoud Rabah Abu Maamar, 28 years old
    77. Musab Yousef Abu Leilah, 28 years old
    78. Ahmed Fawzy Altetr, 28 years old
    79. Mohamed Abdelrahman Meqdad, 28 years old
    80. Obaidah Salim Farhan, 30 years old
    81. Jihad Mufid Al-Farra, 30 years old
    82. Fadi Hassan Abu Salah, 30 years old
    83. Motaz Bassam Kamil Al-Nunu, 31 years old
    84. Mohammed Riyad Abdulrahman Alamudi, 31 years old
    85. Jihad Mohammed Othman Mousa, 31 years old
    86. Shahir Mahmoud Mohammed Almadhoon, 32 years old
    87. Mousa Jabr Abdulsalam Abu Hasnayn, 35 years old
    88. Mohammed Mahmoud Abdulmoti Abdal’al, 39 years old
    89. Ahmed Mohammed Ibrahim Hamdan, 27 years old
    90. Ismail Khalil Ramadhan Aldaahuk, 30 years old
    91. Ahmed Mahmoud Mohammed Alrantisi, 27 years old
    92. Alaa Alnoor Ahmed Alkhatib, 28 years old
    93. Mahmoud Yahya Abdawahab Hussain, 24 years old
    94. Ahmed Abdullah Aladini, 30 years old
    95. Saadi Said Fahmi Abu Salah, 16 years old
    96. Ahmed Zahir Hamid Alshawa, 24 years old
    97. Mohammed Hani Hosni Alnajjar, 33 years old
    98. Fadl Mohamed Ata Habshy, 34 years old
    99. Mokhtar Kaamil Salim Abu Khamash, 23 years old
    100. Mahmoud Wael Mahmoud Jundeyah, 21 years old
    101. Abdulrahman Sami Abu Mattar, 18 years old
    102. Ahmed Salim Alyaan Aljarf, 26 years old
    103. Mahmoud Sulayman Ibrahim Aql, 32 years old
    104. Mohamed Hasan Mustafa Alabadilah, 25 years old
    105. Kamil Jihad Kamil Mihna, 19 years old
    106. Mahmoud Saber Hamad Abu Taeemah, 23 years old
    107. Ali Mohamed Ahmed Khafajah, 21 years old
    108. Abdelsalam Yousef Abdelwahab, 39 years old
    109. Mohamed Samir Duwedar, 27 years old
    110. Talal Adel Ibrahim Mattar, 16 years old
    111. Omar Jomaa Abu Ful, 30 years old
    112. Nasser Ahmed Mahmoud Ghrab, 51 years old
    113. Bilal Badeer Hussein Al-Ashram, 18 years old
    114. Unidentified
    115. Unidentified
    116. Unidentified

    –-> https://medium.com/@thepalestineproject/names-and-ages-of-palestinians-killed-by-israeli-troops-in-gaza-29bad3a12db6

  • Décès de l’acteur égyptien Nour El-Sherif des suites d’une longue maladie
    http://www.atlasinfo.fr/Deces-de-l-acteur-egyptien-Nour-El-Sherif-des-suites-d-une-longue-maladie_

    L’acteur égyptien Nour El-Sherif est décédé mardi à l’âge de 74 ans des suites d’une longue maladie, rapporte l’agence MENA.

    De son vrai nom, Mohamad Jaber Mohamad Abdallah, Nour El-Sherif est né le 28 avril 1946 dans le quartier populaire de Sayeda Zainab au Caire, d’une famille originaire du gouvernorat d’Al Menya. Il est diplômé de l’Institut supérieur des arts dramatiques dont il fut le major de la promotion en 1967.

    […]

    Le défunt s’est illustré par de nombreux rôles dans le cinéma et la télévision, le propulsant comme une grande star dans le monde arabe.

    « Al Massir », « L’escadron de la mort », « Al Karnak », « l’Immeuble Yakoubian », « Naji Al Ali », sont autant de films qui ont mis en valeur son talent.

    A la télévision, il a campé les premiers rôles dans plusieurs feuilletons comme « Haroun Arrachid », « Omar Ibn Abdelaziz », « Lan Aaicha fi jilbabi abi », « La famille de Haji Metwalli », et « Addali », entre autres.

  • Kuwait appoints new electricity minister - Politics & Economics - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/kuwait-appoints-new-electricity-minister-586415.html

    Ahmad Khaled Ahmad Al Jassar has been appointed as Kuwait’s electricity minister days after the former minister stepped down over a black-out.
    The former Kuwait Petroleum Corporation board member was sworn in at the Bayan Palace in front of Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Jaber Al Sabah, Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al Ahmad Al Jaber Al Sabah and Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al Mubarak Al Hamad Al Sabah.
    Abdulaziz Al Ibrahim resigned from the post last week, a month after a widespread power cut hit the Gulf state, although that was not formally given as the reason for his stepping down.
    Kuwait experienced a widespread power outage on February 11. At the time, Ibrahim had attributed the outage to a technical failure at a power station.

  • Le premier ministre koweitien s’interroge sur l’avenir de l’état-providence dans son pays..

    Kuwaitis unleash anger after PM declaring ‘welfare state is over’ - Alarabiya.net English | Front Page
    http://english.alarabiya.net/en/perspective/features/2013/11/04/Kuwaitis-unleash-anger-after-PM-declaring-welfare-state-is-over-.

    Kuwaitis have unleashed their anger on social media when Prime Minister Jaber al-Mubarak al-Sabah recently declared that the country‘s “welfare state is over.”
    Sabah was also backed by the Minister of State for National Assembly Affairs Rola Dashti when she said that “low fees paid for services and goods, with an almost complete absence of tax revenues will force Kuwait to face a deficit between 2021-2029.”
    One Kuwaiti parliamentarian, Hussein al-Kuwayaan, told Al Arabiya that Sabah’s statement has “depressed” the Kuwaiti people.
    “The prime minister needs to explain to the citizens how the welfare era is over,” Kuwayaan said.
    The parliament member, who intends to grill the health minister for corruption and neglecting projects including cancelling tenders for four hospitals, said the government is not capable of providing Kuwaitis with basic needs.
    The political activist Fahed al-Thanian told Al Arabiya that Kuwaitis have “lost faith” in their consecutive cabinets, especially that an economic surplus has disappeared on the backdrop of the lack of development in the country.
    Thanian said the country suffers from epidemic corruption that is the subject of ”gossip” from both Kuwaitis and the government.
    “Many oil producers stopped depending on their oil revenues, diversifying their internal and external investments, but Kuwait is the only country that has a nominal surplus exceeding dozens of billions for over 10 years,” he said.
    “We didn’t see any investment projects, and all we hear about are losses and deficit, and the government has nothing to do but keep on nagging about the deficit and the debts and its inability to meet the needs of the citizens,” he lamented.
    “The citizens are still waiting for raises in salary, housing, health services, quality education, that we’re only hearing about in fairy tales.”

  • Drone Strikes’ Dangers to Get Rare Moment in Public Eye
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/06/world/middleeast/with-brennan-pick-a-light-on-drone-strikes-hazards.html

    The killing of Mr. Jaber, just the kind of leader most crucial to American efforts to eradicate Al Qaeda, was a reminder of the inherent hazards of the quasi-secret campaign of targeted killings that the United States is waging against suspected militants not just in Yemen but also in Pakistan and Somalia. Individual strikes by the Predator and Reaper drones are almost never discussed publicly by Obama administration officials. But the clandestine war will receive a rare moment of public scrutiny on Thursday, when its chief architect, John O. Brennan, the White House counterterrorism adviser, faces a Senate confirmation hearing as President Obama’s nominee for C.I.A. director.

    #drones #exécutions

    • Tiré du même article :

      Not long afterward, the C.I.A. began quietly building a drone base in Saudi Arabia to carry out strikes in Yemen. American officials said that the first time the C.I.A. used the Saudi base was to kill Mr. Awlaki in September 2011.

      La médiatrice du NYTimes, sur l’article : http://publiceditor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/06/the-times-was-right-to-report-at-last-on-a-secret-drone-

      One of its revelations is the location of a drone base in Saudi Arabia. The Times and other news organizations, including The Washington Post, had withheld the location of that base at the request of the C.I.A., but The Times decided to reveal it now because, according to the managing editor Dean Baquet, it was at the heart of this particular article and because examining Mr. Brennan’s role demanded it.

      ...

      The government’s rationale for asking that the location be withheld was this: Revealing it might jeopardize the existence of the base and harm counterterrorism efforts. ”The Saudis might shut it down because the citizenry would be very upset,” he said.