Eyewitnesses describe horrific scenes after Israeli strike on Rafah camp
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JERUSALEM — A deadly Israeli airstrike on a tent camp in Rafah late Sunday drew widespread international condemnation Monday — focusing further scrutiny on Israel’s controversial offensive against Hamas in the south and the desperate plight of Gaza’s civilians.
Witnesses described a horrific scene late Sunday as fires tore through the makeshift encampment in the Tal al-Sultan neighborhood, killing at least 45 people, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Parents were burned alive in their tents while children screamed for help. Doctors recounted struggling to treat gruesome shrapnel wounds with dwindling medical supplies.
In an address to parliament Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the Rafah strike a “tragic accident.” It was a departure from public statements by the Israeli military, which had previously referred to a targeted strike on a Hamas compound using “precise munitions” and “precise intelligence.”
The Israel Defense Forces said two militants were killed in the attack, including the commander of Hamas operations in the West Bank. “There were many measures taken before the attack to minimize harm to non-involved people,” the IDF said Monday, adding that the incident was under investigation.
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A spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter, said the images from Rafah were “heartbreaking.” “Israel has a right to go after Hamas,” the spokesperson said, noting the killing of the two militants, but “Israel must take every precaution possible to protect civilians.”
The United States has yet to weigh in publicly on Friday’s ruling by the International Court of Justice ordering an immediate halt to Israel’s offensive in Rafah. Nearly a million Palestinians have been displaced this month, the vast majority from Rafah, which had been a place of last refuge for tens of thousands of families.
On Sunday night it was the site of one of the most horrifying scenes of the war.
Mohammad Al-Haila, 35, was headed to buy some goods from a local vendor when he saw a huge flash followed by successive booms. Then he saw the flames.
“I felt like my body was freezing from fear,” Haila, who was displaced from central Gaza, told The Washington Post by phone.
He ran toward the area to search for relatives.
“I saw flames rising, charred bodies, people running from everywhere and calls for help getting louder,” he said. “We were powerless to save them.”
Haila lost seven relatives in the attack. The oldest was 70 years old. Four were children.
“We were not able to identify them until this morning because of the charred bodies,” he said. “The faces were eroded, and the features were completely disappeared.”
Ahmed Al-Rahl, 30, still hears the screams.
He and his family were preparing for bed when they heard several large explosions, said Rahl, who is displaced from the north. Their tent shook. Mass confusion took over the camp.
“No one knew what to do,” he said. “Children who were with their families in those tents rushed to us, asking us to save their parents who were burning.”
Rahl had a fire extinguisher and rushed to help.
“I didn’t know what to do to help people as they burned,” he said. Around him there were “dismembered bodies, charred bodies, children without heads, bodies as if they had melted,” he said.
There was no water to extinguish the fire, which consumed the cloth and plastic tents. Gas canisters used for cooking exploded, Rahl said.
“I saw with my own eyes someone burning and crying for help, and I could not save his life,” he said.
Mohammad Abu Shahma, 45, rushed to check on his extended family when he heard that the fire was spreading. His brother’s tent was about a quarter-mile from the worst of the carnage. Shahma figured he must be safe.
He found his brother, a father of 10, and his 3-year-old niece, Palestine, dead. There was blood everywhere, Shahma said. Shrapnel had struck his brother in the chest and neck; the child had been hit in the head. Another daughter, 9-year-old Jana, was injured.
Around 10 p.m. Sunday, the dead and wounded began pouring into the area’s few field clinics.
Twenty-eight people were dead on arrival at a temporary emergency trauma center run by Doctors Without Borders less than two miles from the strike site, according to Samuel Johann, the group’s emergency coordinator in Gaza. The clinic treated 180 additional patients with severe burns, shrapnel wounds, missing body parts and other traumatic injuries, he said.
Farther west, at a clinic run by International Medical Corps, plastic surgeon Ahmed al-Mokhallalati described family members searching desperately for loved ones.
One little girl, he said, was asking everyone she passed if they had seen her parents. Mokhallalati said they were among the dead.
Many people came in with horrific wounds and required amputations, he said, as shrapnel flew across the camp and pierced people’s tents. Over a grueling, relentless night, he and his colleagues conducted at least 12 hours-long surgeries, Mokhallalati said.
They ran out of medical gloves, gowns and other basic supplies to treat open wounds. “We are running out of everything, literally,” he said
Patients needing further care had few places to go, he said. Rafah’s two main hospitals have been evacuated. The smaller Kuwait hospital said Monday that it had to close after repeated attacks. One of the only options left was al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, a rough ride away in central Gaza.
Mokhallalati recounted operating on a 6-year-old girl with deep shrapnel wounds that stretched from her thigh to her abdomen. She died early Monday morning, he said.
The makeshift camp in Tal al-Sultan was outside Israel’s designated evacuation zone in Rafah, and residents were not ordered to leave before the strikes.
The area was at the edge of, but not included in, a map of humanitarian zones provided by the IDF online and in recent announcements. Gazans, however, short on bandwidth and cellphone battery power, often rely for information on word-of-mouth and Arabic-language pamphlets dropped by the IDF. Residents complain that the evacuation orders and accompanying maps are confusingly worded and difficult to follow. Many believed they were in a safe place.
In its statement, the IDF said “the attack did not take place in the humanitarian area in Al Mawasi,” referring to a coastal region northwest of Rafah where it has ordered evacuees.
New arrivals to Mawasi have told The Post the area is desolate, overcrowded and devoid of even the most basic services. Some families, many who have already been uprooted numerous times during the war, decided to stay in Rafah.
French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday that he was “outraged by the Israeli strikes that have killed many displaced persons” and called for “an immediate cease-fire.”
Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly also demanded a cease-fire, saying, “This level of human suffering must come to an end.” A spokesperson for the ministry said the country was following up on reports that two Canadian citizens were among the dead in Rafah.
The Foreign Ministry in Germany, one of Israel’s most stalwart supporters in Europe, said in a statement on X on Monday that the images from the attack were “unbearable” and that “the civilian population in Gaza must urgently be better protected.”
Shahma spent Monday packing up. His extended family of 50 people had decided that women and children would move to Mawasi, he said, and the men would stay in nearby Khan Younis.
“We did not even find time to grieve for those we lost,” he said. “All that matters to us now is to save those who remain.”
Haila spent the day searching scorched corpses at the clinic in Tal al-Sultan for any sign of his missing family members.
“What we live in this life cannot be described,” he said. It was like being “on the waiting list” to die.
Harb reported from London. Sarah Dadouch in Beirut, Rachel Pannett in Wellington, New Zealand, Niha Masih in Seoul, Lior Soroka in Tel Aviv, Hazem Balousha in Cairo, Amanda Coletta in Toronto and Tyler Pager in Washington contributed to this report.
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Finastra has confirmed it warned customers of a cybersecurity incident after a threat actor began promoting allegedly stolen recordsdata on a hacking forum.
Finastra is a monetary tool company serving over 8,000 institutions all over 130 nations, including forty five of the realm’s high 50 banks and credit unions. The company employs 12,000 folks, and last yr, it reported a earnings of $1.7 billion.
The safety incident came about on November 7, 2024, when an attacker earlier compromised credentials to salvage admission to one in all Finastra’s Secure File Transfer Platform (SFTP) programs.
The company says that its investigation up to now, which is aided by exterior cybersecurity experts, presentations no proof that the breach prolonged past its SFTP platform.
The company’s tool services encompass lending strategies, rate processing, cloud-enabled retail and banking platforms, and buying and selling risk administration instruments.
Brian Krebs first reported that Finastra suffered a safety breach the day gone by after seeing an recordsdata breach notification sent to an impacted particular person.
The attack is believed to be linked to a most up-to-the-minute put up on a hacking forum, the put a threat actor named “abyss0” claimed to be promoting 400GB of recordsdata stolen from Finastra.
When requested in regards to the forum put up, a Finastra spokesperson would neither verify nor speak if the records belonged to them, easiest telling BleepingComputer that that they had suffered a restricted-scope safety breach and are currently evaluating its impact.
“On November 7, 2024 Finastra’s Security Operations Heart (SOC) detected suspicious articulate linked to an internally hosted Secure File Transfer Platform (SFTP) we articulate to send recordsdata to obvious customers,” Finastra told BleepingComputer.
“We at the moment launched an investigation alongside of a third-celebration cybersecurity company and, as a precautionary step, isolated and contained the platform. This incident became restricted to the one platform and there became no lateral motion past it.”
The company additionally clarified that the compromised SFTP platform became no longer earlier by all its customers, nor became it the default platform earlier by Finastra for file exchange.
Nevertheless, the categorical impact and scope of its breach are peaceable being investigated, and figuring out who’s impacted might possibly possibly additionally take some time till or no longer it is performed.
Those that are deemed impacted will seemingly be contacted straight, so public disclosures from Finastra are no longer anticipated.
It be price noting that the threat actor who published the records samples earlier this month has since deleted the put up, so whether the records became sold to a buyer or ‘abyss0’ grew to salvage fervent by the sudden publicity is unknown.
In March 2020, Finastra suffered one other major cybersecurity incident when it received hit by ransomware actors.
Merit then, the fintech company became compelled to take substances of its IT infrastructure offline essentially essentially based on the threat, which introduced about provider disruptions.
Though the draw of preliminary salvage admission to became unknown, experiences from threat monitoring platforms highlighted the company’s lackluster vulnerability administration strategy, noting that it became the articulate of older variations of Pulse Secure VPN and Citrix servers.
Meta has taken down tens of thousands of Instagram accounts from Nigeria as fragment of a broad crackdown on sextortion scams. The accounts essentially centered adult men in the United States, but some additionally centered minors, Meta stated in an replace.
The takedowns are fragment of a bigger effort by Meta to fight sextortion scams on its platform in most recent months. Earlier this year, the firm added a safety characteristic in Instagram messages to automatically detect nudity and warn customers about likely blackmail scams. The firm additionally offers in-app sources and safety guidelines about such scams.
Per Meta, essentially the most recent takedowns included 2,500 accounts that had been linked to a community of about 20 these that worked collectively to tag sextortion scams. The firm additionally took down thousands of accounts and groups on Fb that offered guidelines and different advice, including scripts and false photos, for would-be sextortionists. Those accounts had been linked to the Yahoo Boys, a community of “loosely organized cybercriminals working largely out of Nigeria that specialise in differing kinds of scams,” Meta stated.
Meta has come below explicit scrutiny for now not doing ample to provide protection to teens from sextortion on its apps. In some unspecified time in the future of a Senate hearing earlier this year, Senator Lindsey Graham pressed Impress Zuckerberg on whether the folks of a kid who died by suicide after falling victim to the sort of rip-off wants with a blueprint to sue the firm.
Though the firm stated that the “majority” of the scammers it uncovered in its most recent takedowns centered adults, it confirmed that one of the major accounts had centered minors as effectively and that these accounts had additionally been reported to the Nationwide Center for Lacking and Exploited Kids (NCMEC).
A New Lawsuit Accuses Spotify of Cheating Songwriters Out of Royalties
Spotify Technology SA used a legalistic word change to justify slicing royalties to musicians and publishers, reducing the revenue on which royalties are based by almost 50%, according to lawsuit filed by the group that collects their payments.
The change came in March when Spotify added the word “bundled” to its description of its $10.99-a-month music streaming service, the Mechanical Licensing Collective said in its complaint. Nothing else “about the Premium service has actually changed,” according to the suit filed Thursday in federal court in Manhattan.
The collective is legally barred from disclosing how much Spotify royalties declined since March but cited a Billboard story that estimated the loss would amount to about $150 million next year.
Spotify said it looks forward to “swift resolution” of the lawsuit, which it said concerns terms that publishers and streaming services “agreed to and celebrated years ago.”
“Bundles were a critical component of that settlement, and multiple DSPs include bundles as part of their mix of subscription offerings,” a Spotify spokesperson said in a statement. “Spotify paid a record amount to publishers and societies in 2023 and is on track to pay out an even larger amount in 2024.”
The fight over bundling between the streaming service and publishers has spilled into a dispute over other issues.
The National Music Publishers’ Association on Wednesday sent a cease-and-desist letter to Spotify over products it claims are infringing on songwriters’ copyrights. The NMPA alleges that music videos, lyrics and podcasts on the platform are all using copyrighted music without the proper permissions.
“Before Spotify’s ‘bundling’ betrayal, we may have been able to work together to fix this problem, but they have chosen the hard road by coming after songwriters once again,” David Israelite, chief executive officer at the NMPA, said in a statement.
In response, a Spotify spokesperson called the letter a “press stunt filled with false and misleading claims.”
Music and audiobook streaming companies, like Spotify, pay musicians and music publishers under a complex system set out in 2018 by the Music Modernization Act of 2018. Under the system, streaming services pay less per stream—in other words, less to creators and publishers—when their services are classified as bundles.
Spotify’s Premium service, which was not classified as a bundle before March 1, includes unlimited music downloads and 15 hours of audiobooks. It added the audiobook offering in November in the U.S. without changing the $10.99 price.
The licensing collective is asking the court to order Spotify to stop classifying Premium as a bundled service and to pay it for lost revenue.
Israelite praised the Mechanical Licensing Collective for “not letting Spotify get away with its latest trick to underpay creators.”
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