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Hamas’ Yahya Sinwar killed by forces in Gaza, Israel says | Special Report

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Hamas’ Yahya Sinwar killed by forces in Gaza, Israel says | Special Report – CBS News


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Yahya Sinwar has been killed by Israeli forces, Israel’s Foreign Minister Israel Katz said. Hamas’ top leader and apparent architect of the October 7, 2023, attacks against Israel was killed during an operation in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military said. Major Garrett anchored CBS News’ special report.

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How the nonprofit Stand with Trans tries to empower, support transgender youth: “Lead with love”

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Laws that limit LGBTQ+ rights are being considered in 41 U.S. states, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

While more than 300,000 American teenagers identify as trans, most of them — over 280,000 — live in states that have “proposed or passed laws restricting their rights,” according to the UCLA School of Law Williams Institute.

The nonprofit organization Stand with Trans aims to help trans and nonbinary people, and their loved ones, find community and resources. Each October, the group celebrates a month of programming for Trans Empowerment Month, including support groups, education training, panels and workshops. 

What is Stand with Trans?

Roz Keith founded Stand with Trans in 2015. Her son came out as transgender in 2013, when he was 13 years old. As a parent, Keith struggled to find resources.

“I knew we needed to help and support our child and we just didn’t know how. We didn’t have anyone to talk to. There were no medical resources,” Keith said, adding the process felt isolating and challenging. 

“I was hitting a brick wall, and the question would be ‘Oh, a minor? Oh, a 13-year-old? No, sorry we only treat adults. We only have support groups for adults.'”

The nonprofit supports all transgender people, but primarily supports youth between the ages of 12 and 22 years old, according to their website.  In addition to helping young trans individuals, the organization also provides support groups for parents.

Resources for transgender people

Keith said in an interview with “CBS Mornings” that gender-affirming care is needed by a trans person to live authentically. 

“Endocrinologists deal in the business of hormones, so regardless of age, if somebody wants to medically transition that’s typically one of the things that’s high on the priority,” she said.

Keith added it also translates to finding mental health services, being allowed to choose a different name and pick pronouns that an individual identifies with.

According to a poll by The Trevor Project, an advocacy group that provides mental health support for young people, 90% of LGBTQ+ youth say their wellbeing is negatively impacted by recent politics.

More than two dozen mental and physical health associations have endorsed the need for treatments for gender dysphoria. 

“I was born in the mid-80s, and there were no resources that I knew of, and so it was really challenging,” said Dubbs Weinblatt, the Trans Empowerment Month program coordinator for Stand with Trans. 

Weinblatt, who is a non-binary trans person, said it wasn’t until they were in their late 20s when they learned about non-binary identity.

“People would say to me, ‘You’re my daughter. You’re my sister.’ Use words like ‘girl’ for me, and that never felt right. It always felt at odds with who I knew myself to be on the inside.”

Beyond resources, Weinblatt said positive representation is important for trans people.

“Really just more representation in the media of seeing positive representation … and really support groups that Stand with Trans has, and different programming, where I could have met other people, like ‘OK, I’m not alone in this.'”

Weinblatt offered a simple message to those hoping to support a trans person in their life.

“Lead with love and kindness, and showing that you’re open, that you’re non-judgmental creates that space for someone to trust you, to share themselves,” Weinblatt said.



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Israel says Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ top leader in Gaza, killed in major blow to militant group

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Israel’s Foreign Minister Israel Katz said Thursday that Hamas’ top leader and long-time commander in the Gaza Strip, Yahya Sinwar, was killed by troops during an operation in the decimated Palestinian territory.

In a message the Israeli government said was shared with dozens of other foreign ministers around the world, Katz said Sinwar, “who is responsible for the massacre and atrocities of October 7, was killed today by IDF soldiers.”

“This is a great military and moral achievement for Israel and victory for the free world in everything against the evil axis of extreme Islam led by Iran,” said Katz in the statement.

U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, who chairs the U.S. House of Representatives Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence said in a statement Thursday that “justice has been served to Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar,” adding that it was his hope the killing would “result in further progress toward the release of all hostages still held in Gaza, as well as to a ceasefire for Palestinians who have suffered under Hamas’ grip for far too long.”

A photo circulating on social media showed a man resembling the Hamas commander laying dead on a pile of rubble with a gaping head wound, but CBS News could not immediately verify the image. Sinwar had been one of the most wanted figures on Israel’s target list since Hamas launched its Oct. 7, 2023 cross-border terror attack, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 others hostage. 

“In the building where the terrorists were eliminated, there were no signs of the presence of hostages in the area,” the IDF said earlier Thursday.  

Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, seen in a file photo from March 22, 2017.

Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Getty


Who was Yahya Sinwar

Sinwar, 61, was accused by Israel of orchestrating the Oct. 7 terrorist attack. He had remained in hiding in Gaza since that massacre was carried out.

He was named as the overall leader of Hamas in August, following the assassination of its former political chief Ismail Haniyeh during a visit to Iran. Before that he had led the group as its top commander in Gaza since 2017. He was considered a ruthless militant commander with close ties to Hamas’ biggest benefactor, Iran.

According to CBS News’ partner network BBC News, Sinwar was born in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip. His parents had lived in Ashkelon, which is now southern Israel, but they were among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced in the war that followed Israel’s founding in 1948.

Posters featuring Hamas' new political chief Sinwar in Tehran
A poster in Iran’s capital Tehran shows Hamas’ top commander in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, on Aug. 13, 2024.

Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu/Getty


Speaking during a 2021 news conference in Gaza, after a previous 10-day round of violence between Hamas and Israel, Sinwar told international journalists “the best gift the occupation leaders [Israel] can give me is assassinating me, because since childhood, I was raised in a way that taught me to sacrifice my life for this country.”

“We are not lovers of killing and death, but we are a people who need our rights given back to us,” he said. “If this is secured through popular, nonviolent resistance and international diplomacy then that is preferable, but if we are forced to use the most dangerous means, then we are ready, and our people we will not hesitate to use any means whatsoever to earn their rights.”

Israel’s steady elimination of Hamas leaders

The IDF has killed dozens of commanders and hundreds of fighters belonging to Hamas, long designated a terrorist group by the U.S., Israel and many other countries, since Israel launched its blistering war in Gaza in immediate retaliation for Oct. 7 attack. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has stressed since the beginning of the war that no senior Hamas figure would escape — and there was none more senior in Gaza than Sinwar.

Haniyeh, who spent decades living in exile in Qatar, was assassinated in Iran’s capital in late July after attending the inauguration of that country’s new president. Israel has not publicly claimed responsibility for the brazen assassination in Tehran, but U.S. officials told CBS News at the time that it was an Israeli strike. 

Mohammed Deif, the head of Hamas’ military wing the al-Qassam Brigades, was killed in an airstrike in Gaza in July, according to the IDF.

“There is only one place for Yahya Sinwar, and it is beside Mohammed Deif and the rest of the October 7th terrorists,” IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari said in an interview over the summer. “That is the only place we’re preparing and intending for him.”

Israel’s top coordinator for hostages and the missing told CBS News’ Elizabeth Palmer in September that the Israeli government was prepared to offer Sinwar and his family safe passage out of Gaza if Hamas agreed to relinquish control of Gaza and allow the return of the remaining 101 hostages.

“It would be the end of the war, as [the hostages] will be recovered,” Israeli negotiator Gal Hirsch told CBS News at the time. Sinwar never issued a reply to the Israeli proposal.

Israeli hostage families react 

Even before his death was confirmed by the IDF, the Israeli Hostages Families Forum said in a statement that his killing was an achievement, but that only the return of their loved ones could be considered a victory. 

“The Hostages Families Forum commends the security forces for eliminating Sinwar, who masterminded the greatest massacre our country has ever faced, responsible for the murder of thousands and the abduction of hundreds,” the group said. “However, we express deep concern for the fate of the 101 men, women, elderly and children still held captive by Hamas in Gaza. We call on the Israeli government, world leaders, and mediating countries to leverage the military achievement into a diplomatic one by pursuing an immediate agreement for the release of all 101 hostages: the living for rehabilitation and the murdered for proper burial.”


Family of slain hostage: “We were failed by Israel’s leaders”

02:22

Of the 101 hostages still held in Gaza, Israeli intelligence suggests 64 are still alive.

Sinwar’s killing was announced hours after more than a dozen Palestinians, including children, were killed in an Israeli airstrike on a school in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, that was sheltering displaced people, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run Palestinian territory.

contributed to this report.



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