World
Video: An American’s Desperate Effort to Save Her Family in Gaza
new video loaded: An American’s Desperate Effort to Save Her Family in Gaza
transcript
transcript
An American’s Desperate Effort to Save Her Family in Gaza
Following an Israeli airstrike on a camp for displaced Palestinians in Rafah, Gaza, Rolla Alaydi, a Palestinian American, could not reach her family members in Rafah for days, leaving her unsure if they had survived the attack.
-
We’re going to start a long journey of trying to get them out of Gaza to the safety. I have a total of 21 family members, and they are scattered in different areas of Gaza. They took a decision not to be in one area in case something happened — not all of them will be killed or bombed. Before the war started, all my family, they have their degree. They have all their own career. They lived a very decent life. I feel just hopeless doing nothing. Just waiting and time, just killing me. I cannot even give them the medicine that I got for them. I don’t know what to do. Not strong at all. Not strong at all. When I saw the images of burning tents and the bombing of Rafah, I almost got heart attack because I know for sure my brother, his six kids and his wife, they are in tent in Rafah. This could be my family. They could be burned. They could be killed. The internet signal is weak. It took a whole week from the incident of Rafah to know about my family that they survived. I don’t know what will happen to them next hour. Every hour is unpredictable. If I don’t hear from my family in three days, going to the fourth, I go insane. Voice message: “Your call cannot be completed as dialed. Please check the number and dial again.” My mind is just going all over the scenarios. Like they could be killed, they could be bombed, they could be burned, and no one recognized their faces. And that is the most — horrific, scary feeling. I have to be strong just for my family. All my family, 21 family members, depends on me. I’m their only source of hope.
Recent episodes in Israel-Hamas War
World
Flavio Bolsonaro retracts suggestion of a ‘price’ to end 2026 election bid
Former President Jair Bolsonaro has endorsed his eldest son’s campaign to be Brazil’s next president in the 2026 race.
Published On 10 Dec 2025
Far-right Senator Flavio Bolsonaro has reaffirmed his commitment to running in Brazil’s 2026 presidential race, despite criticism that he appeared to be openly haggling over whether to remain a candidate.
On Tuesday, Bolsonaro met with reporters outside federal police headquarters in the capital Brasilia, where his father, former President Jair Bolsonaro, is serving a 27-year sentence for attempting to foment a coup.
list of 3 itemsend of listRecommended Stories
The younger Bolsonaro said he conveyed to his father that he would not shrink from the 2026 race.
“I told him this candidacy is irreversible,” Flavio said. “And in his own words, ‘We will not turn back.’ Now it is time to talk to people, so we can have the right people on our side.”
The senator also attempted to clear up the comments that sparked the initial controversy.
On Sunday, Flavio raised eyebrows when he told Brazilian media that he could exit the race — for the right “price”.
“There’s a possibility I won’t go all the way,” Flavio said at the time. “I have a price for that. I will negotiate.”
He declined to name what that price would be, but his comments were widely interpreted to be a reference to his father’s imprisonment.
In September, a panel on Brazil’s Supreme Court convicted Jair of five charges related to his attempts to overturn the 2022 presidential election, including one count of seeking the violent abolition of the democratic rule of law.
Jair lost the 2022 race to current Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a left-wing leader who has announced he will run for a fourth term in 2026.
In November, the Supreme Court panel ordered Jair to be taken into custody to begin his sentence, after the ex-president admitted to damaging his ankle monitor.
Separately, in 2023, Brazil’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal ruled that Jair should be barred from holding public office for eight years, as a penalty for misusing the presidential office to spread election falsehoods.
Since his detention, Jair has backed his eldest son’s candidacy in the 2026 race. Liberal Party (PL) president Valdemar Costa Neto also confirmed on Friday that Jair’s endorsement meant that Flavio would indeed lead the party’s ticket.
Flavio has since received other right-wing endorsements, including from Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio de Freitas, who was previously considered a frontrunner to represent the PL.
But Flavio’s comments on Sunday have thrown his nascent candidacy into doubt.
Critics, including from Lula’s Workers Party, have seized upon Flavio’s suggestion of a “price” to question his ethics and commitment.
“No one launches a candidacy one day, and the next day says, ‘Look, I can negotiate,’” Edinho Silva, the president of the Workers Party, told reporters. “It’s not just me. No one would take it seriously.”
But Flavio on Tuesday dismissed the attacks and reaffirmed he would stay in the race, while fighting for his father’s freedom.
“My price is Bolsonaro free and on the ballot,” he said. “In other words, there is no price.”
World
Russia’s top general says army is advancing in Ukraine and targeting Myrnohrad
Item 1 of 4 A view shows apartment buildings damaged by Russian military strikes, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in the frontline town of Myrnohrad, Donetsk region, Ukraine May 29, 2025. REUTERS/Anatolii Stepanov
MOSCOW, Dec 9 (Reuters) – Russia’s top general, Valery Gerasimov, said on Tuesday that Moscow’s forces were advancing along the entire front line in Ukraine and were targeting surrounded Ukrainian troops in the town of Myrnohrad.
In a command post meeting with officers of the Centre Grouping which is fighting in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region, Gerasimov said President Vladimir Putin had ordered the defeat of Ukrainian forces in Myrnohrad, a town with a pre-war population of some 46,000 people to the east of Pokrovsk.
Sign up here.
Russia had taken control of more than 30% of Myrnohrad’s buildings, Gerasimov said.
Russia, which uses the Soviet-era name of Krasnoarmeysk to refer to neighbouring Pokrovsk, says it has taken the whole of the city and claims to have also encircled Ukrainian forces in Myrnohrad, which Russians call Dimitrov.
Ukraine has repeatedly denied Russian claims that Pokrovsk has fallen and says it forces still hold part of the city and are fighting back in Myrnohrad.
Russia currently controls 19.2% of Ukraine, including Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Luhansk, more than 80% of Donetsk, about 75% of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, and slivers of the Kharkiv, Sumy, Mykolaiv and Dnipropetrovsk regions.
Ukraine says it is holding its defensive lines and forcing Russia to pay a high price for what it says are relatively modest gains.
Reporting by Reuters;
Writing by Guy Faulconbridge
Editing by Andrew Osborn
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
World
Honduras issues warrant for former president pardoned by Trump
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Honduras’ attorney general is calling for the arrest of former President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was recently pardoned by President Donald Trump.
Johel Antonio Zelaya Alvarez said Monday that he ordered Honduran authorities and asked Interpol to execute a 2023 arrest order against Hernández for alleged fraud and money laundering charges. Hernandez, who in 2024 was sentenced to 45 years for allegedly helping to move tons of cocaine into the U.S., was released from federal prison in the U.S. a week ago.
“We have been lacerated by the tentacles of corruption and by the criminal networks that have deeply marked the life of our country,” Zelaya said, according to a translation of a post he wrote on X.
Zelaya included a photo of the two-year-old order signed by a Honduras Supreme Court magistrate that says that it must be executed “in the case that the accused is freed by United States authorities.”
FORMER HONDURAN PRESIDENT RELEASED FROM US PRISON AFTER TRUMP PARDON
Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, right, was pardoned by President Donald Trump on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
Dozens of Honduran officials and politicians were implicated in the so-called Pandora case in which Honduran prosecutors alleged government funds were diverted through a network of nongovernmental organizations to political parties, including Hernández’s 2013 presidential campaign, according to The Associated Press.
Hernández went from supposed U.S. ally in the war on drugs to the subject of a U.S. extradition request shortly after he left office in 2022, the AP added. He was detained and sent to the U.S. by current President Xiomara Castro of the social democrat LIBRE party.
A lawyer for Hernández, Renato Stabile, told the AP in an email that, “This is obviously a strictly political move on behalf of the defeated Libre party to try to intimidate President Hernandez as they are being kicked out of power in Honduras. It is shameful and a desperate piece of political theatre and these charges are completely baseless.”
Hernández was freed after Trump announced he was issuing him a “full and complete pardon” following his conviction of conspiring with drug traffickers to import more than 400 tons of cocaine into the U.S.
FORMER WORLD LEADER THANKS TRUMP FOR PARDON: ‘YOU CHANGED MY LIFE’
Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, second from right, is taken in handcuffs to a waiting aircraft as he is extradited to the United States, at an Air Force base in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, on April 21, 2022. (Elmer Martinez/AP)
Trump said Hernández was “treated very harshly and unfairly,” implying that his trial was politically motivated or over-prosecuted.
Hernández was convicted in New York on charges of conspiring to import cocaine into the U.S. and two related weapons offenses after a two-week trial.
Hernández portrayed himself as a hero of the anti-drug trafficking movement who teamed up with American authorities under three U.S. presidential administrations to reduce drug imports, according to the AP. But the judge said trial evidence proved the opposite and that Hernández employed “considerable acting skills” to make it seem that he was an anti-drug trafficking crusader while he deployed his nation’s police and military, when necessary, to protect the drug trade.
Hernández later thanked Trump for pardoning him, writing on social media that he was “wrongfully convicted.”
Honduras’ President Juan Orlando Hernandez speaks during the opening ceremony of the U.N. Climate Change Conference COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, on Monday Nov. 1, 2021. (Andy Buchanan/AP)
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
“My profound gratitude goes to President @realDonaldTrump for having the courage to defend justice at a moment when a weaponized system refused to acknowledge the truth. You reviewed the facts, recognized the injustice, and acted with conviction. You changed my life, sir, and I will never forget it,” Hernández wrote on X.
Fox News Digital’s Ashley Carnahan, Michael Dorgan, Bradford Betz and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
-
Alaska3 days agoHowling Mat-Su winds leave thousands without power
-
Politics1 week agoTrump rips Somali community as federal agents reportedly eye Minnesota enforcement sweep
-
Ohio5 days ago
Who do the Ohio State Buckeyes hire as the next offensive coordinator?
-
News1 week agoTrump threatens strikes on any country he claims makes drugs for US
-
World1 week agoHonduras election council member accuses colleague of ‘intimidation’
-
Texas3 days agoTexas Tech football vs BYU live updates, start time, TV channel for Big 12 title
-
Miami, FL3 days agoUrban Meyer, Brady Quinn get in heated exchange during Alabama, Notre Dame, Miami CFP discussion
-
Cleveland, OH2 days agoMan shot, killed at downtown Cleveland nightclub: EMS