Vue lecture

Class-action trial in Manitoba to challenge province’s use of segregation jail cells on children

Devon Daniels was 14 years old the first time he was put in a segregation cell.

Manitoba’s practice of putting incarcerated children in segregation jail cells − including some who are as young as 12 and 13 years old − will be challenged this fall when a landmark class-action lawsuit goes to trial.

The case, which has been about seven years in the making, will be the first major piece of litigation dealing with youth inmate segregation to go to trial in Canada. It follows several recent lawsuits against governments in the country that have successfully challenged aspects of how solitary confinement is used in adult prisons.

© Marissa Tiel

Devon Daniels poses for a photo on Xaxli’p territory near Lillooet, B.C. on Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. Marissa Tiel/ The Globe and Mail
  •  

A year and millions of orders later, Nova Scotia’s school lunch program kicks off again

In a large commercial kitchen in Halifax’s north end, chef Shane Gallagher sprinkled a garnish of parmesan, garlic, parsley and breadcrumbs onto the creamy broccoli pasta his team had just plated. It was a simple dish, but Mr. Gallagher – who’s worked at some of the city’s best restaurants, including Bar Kismet and Drift – added some cheffy touches: The breadcrumbs were processed from fluffy, olive-oil-rich slabs of focaccia, and the sauce’s flavour was punched up with the sweet funkiness of puréed garlic confit.

This was lost on many diners. Some took a few bites before throwing out the rest of the dish. Others refused to taste it at all.

© Carolina Andrade

The culinary team assemble lunches to be distributed at schools in Halifax, Nova Scotia at the Upward Kitchen prep kitchen on June 23rd, 2025. Carolina Andrade/The Globe and Mail
  •  

Actor Graham Greene dead at 73

Governor General Mary Simon presents actor Graham Greene with the Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award during the Governor General's Performing Arts Awards ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, on June 13.

Prolific Canadian actor Graham Greene, who earlier this year received a Governor General’s award for lifetime artistic achievement, has died.

Greene’s management team said he died on Monday in Stratford, Ont., after a long illness. He was 73.

  •  

Noted cardiologist Dr. Maurice McGregor believed deeply in national health care

Maurice McGregor was a cardiologist, professor, researcher and mentor.

When Maurice McGregor graduated from high school, his father sat him down for a pragmatic talk about the future. The fact that young Maurice had not been the smartest of students did not preclude him from pursuing a career in education, law or medicine because if only the smartest were able to take on positions of authority, the world would be in a lot of trouble.

The son chose medicine because it was a field that sparked his curiosity. And, coming from a family of fierce pacifists who were all aware that a new world war was on the horizon, he wanted to be able to take part as a healer who would not have to maim or kill others.

©

Maurice McGregor
Courtesy of the family
  •  

Two B.C. unions are prepared to strike on Tuesday

Many of the more than 35,000 public-service employees from two unions in British Columbia will be heading to the picket lines on Tuesday morning if they are not called back to the bargaining table, the union heads say.

“We think our government is out of touch with both our membership and the public‚” said Paul Finch, bargaining chair and president of the British Columbia General Employees’ Union. “We think the government needs to take a knee and revise their position here.”

The BCGEU, which represents 34,000 public-sector employees, as well as the Professional Employees Association (PEA), which represents more than 1,800 licensed government professionals, each issued a 72-strike notice on Friday.

© Adrian Wyld

British Columbia's provincial flag flies on a flag pole in Ottawa on July 6, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
  •  

Liberal MPs call for action against antisemitism after stabbing of Jewish woman in Ottawa

Liberal MP Anthony Housefather in Ottawa in May, 2024. Housefather and 31 other Liberal lawmakers released a letter decrying a 'deplorable' rise in antisemitism.

Nearly a fifth of the Liberal caucus has issued a letter calling for more to be done to address a rise in antisemitism after a Jewish woman in her 70s was stabbed at an Ottawa grocery store.

Mount Royal MP Anthony Housefather posted the letter on social media he signed along with 31 other Liberal lawmakers that decries what the letter calls the “deplorable” rise in antisemitism, warning it is “becoming normalized” in Canada.

  •  

Quebec Premier François Legault to testify on auto board scandal

Quebec Premier François Legault in July. He is set to testify at a public inquiry examining how an online platform known as SAAQclic went at least $500-million over budget.

All eyes will be on Quebec Premier François Legault on Tuesday as he is set to testify at the public inquiry into the cost overrun scandal at the province’s auto insurance board.

The commission, overseen by Judge Denis Gallant, is examining how the creation of the online platform known as SAAQclic incurred cost overruns of at least $500-million.

  •  

NDP can no longer count on support of union workers as labour vote splits

An autoworker gives the middle finger to the NDP's then-leader Jagmeet Singh as he tries to meet workers at the Chrysler Stellantis plant during the federal election, in Windsor, Ont., on March 27.

A year ago, then-NDP leader Jagmeet Singh’s Labour Day message to workers insisted that his party alone would stand shoulder-to-shoulder with working Canadians and the unions that work to protect their rights.

Six months later, Singh stood outside of an auto plant in Windsor, Ont. during the federal election, hoping to offer support and comfort to workers reeling from news of new auto tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump. But Singh was not greeted with warmth – most of them ignored him entirely, rushing past with their heads down as they came off shift, while some others indicated a preference for the Conservatives and Leader Pierre Poilievre.

  •  

Wildfires, labour disruptions burn tourism operators’ bottom line

Fireweed in bloom in an old wildfire burn near Wildwood, Alta. Some travellers have cancelled trips because they didn’t want wildfire smoke to ruin their experience.

Fewer tourists are coming to Jasper, Alta., than usual this year, but it’s not for a lack of people eager to visit the picturesque Rocky Mountain town. 

Numbers are about as good as they can be, considering about one-fifth of the town’s overnight accommodations burned when a ferocious wildfire swept through last summer, said Tourism Jasper CEO Tyler Riopel. 

  •  

Food influencers help local restaurants go viral

Vancouver-based influencer Laura Ullock documents an all-you-can-eat pizza experience in a video that would soon garner more than a million views. Creators like Ullock help drive traffic to local businesses as viewers trust their recommendations.

It was a 22-second video that changed the fortunes of a Hong Kong bakery in British Columbia.

Laura Ullock, a prominent food and lifestyle social-media influencer based in Vancouver, had heard about Unique Slow Rise Bakery, a small, family-run business tucked away next to a campground in the shadow of Shannon Falls, in Squamish.

  •  

Two Northwest Territories communities under evacuation order as wildfires burn nearby

A fire burns near Enterprise, NWT, in 2023. Wildfires in parts of the territory have prompted evacuation orders and alerts this week.

The night before they had to leave their home in the Northwest Territories because of an encroaching wildfire, Paschalina Nadli and her daughter carefully packed up their truck.

Their community of Fort Providence, NWT, where fewer than 1,000 people live, is located west of Great Slave Lake along the Mackenzie River. It was placed on evacuation alert on Saturday evening as a wildfire raged nearby.

  •  

Margaret Atwood responds to Alberta book ban with satirical short story

Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid’s Tale is among more than 200 books the Edmonton Public School Board is banning from schools.

Margaret Atwood is taking aim at Alberta’s controversial ban on school library books containing sexual content with a new, satirical short story after the famed author’s novel The Handmaid’s Tale was yanked from some shelves owing to the province’s sweeping new rules.

In a social media post on Sunday, Ms. Atwood said since the literary classic is no longer suitable in Alberta’s schools, she has written a short story for 17-year olds about two “very, very good children” named John and Mary.

  •  

Some Indigenous businesses halt exports to U.S. following suspension of the de minimis exemption

The U.S. tariff exemption for package shipments valued under US$800 ended on Friday.

Some small Indigenous businesses are halting shipments to the U.S. in the wake of President Donald Trump’s tariff regime, even though trade ties exist that predate the founding of both Canada and the United States.

“There needs to be a resolution to allow Indigenous Peoples to continue to undergo the trade routes that they have established and practised, and the treaties that have been signed in the past have suggested that these would be honoured,” said Matthew Foss, who serves as the vice president of research and public policy at the Canadian Council for Indigenous Businesses.

  •  

Wildfire in NWT’s Fort Providence prompts evacuation order

An evacuation order was issued for a second community in Northwest Territories on Sunday due to a dangerously close wildfire.

After being told to be ready to leave a day earlier, the community of Fort Providence, which has a population of about 600 people, was ordered out because a forecast of strong winds in the afternoon risked flames encroaching the north side of town.

A NWT wildfire information officer said the wildfire was about two kilometres away from the community.

© JASON FRANSON

Fire continues to burn underground near Enterprise, Northwest Territories on Wednesday October 11, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson
  •  

Asteroid spacedust offers glimpse into celestial history as Canada readies to receive sample for research

A view of eight sample trays containing the final material from asteroid Bennu. Granules were collected and brought to Earth in September, 2023 as part of NASA-led OSIRIS-REx mission.

New research on a sample collected from the asteroid Bennu – a small portion of which should arrive in Canada soon – is offering a glimpse into how it came to be.

Studies published in Nature Astronomy and Nature Geoscience last week offer some insight into the granules that were collected and brought to Earth in September, 2023, as part of the NASA-led OSIRIS-REx mission.

  •  

Services at Quebec end-of-life care home reflect growing demand for MAID

Quebec has the highest proportion of MAID deaths in Canada, at 7.3 per cent. In Lanaudière’s health region, it’s 12.4 per cent.

In nearly 30 years as a palliative care physician, Dr. Nathalie Allard has provided end-of-life care in busy hospital hallways, and consulted with families with only a curtain separating them from sick people screaming or vomiting on the other side.

On Thursday, she attended the opening of a brand-new palliative care facility northeast of Montreal that represents the kind of place where she wants to work and, one day, to die.

  •  

As Ottawa drops elbows, most provinces stand firm against selling U.S. alcohol

A half-empty shelf of American whiskey is pictured at the 100 Queen’s Quay East LCBO in Toronto on March 4, 2025. Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the LCBO will not be putting U.S. liquor back on shelves until Canada and the U.S. reach a trade deal.

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s recent decision to lift countertariffs on U.S. goods has renewed questions about whether more Canadian provinces will allow liquor retailers to put U.S. alcohol back on their shelves.

American industry associations have been calling for an end to the booze bans, arguing that they harm Canadian consumers and businesses.

  •  

PEI man facing terrorism peace bond prohibited from accessing internet or having passport

A Prince Edward Island man facing a terrorism peace bond has been ordered to follow a raft of conditions, including not accessing the internet and not holding a passport.

The RCMP in Prince Edward Island sought a terrorism peace bond for the 51-year-old man, fearing he may commit a terrorism offence.

Officers say they seized 3D printed firearm components and arrested the man at his residence in February.

© JASON FRANSON

An RCMP epaulette is seen in Edmonton, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson
  •  

Public servants took fewer sick days during the pandemic, data shows

Treasury Board says the average usage of sick days includes people who used no sick leave and people who used up banked sick leave before accessing long term disability benefits. 

Federal public servants were less likely to call in sick to work during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, new government data show.

The figures shared by the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat indicate that in 2020-21, when the pandemic had most office employees working entirely remotely, the average number of sick days for the public service was 5.9.

  •  

44-year-old arrested for double homicide in Sudbury, Ont. as police seek additional suspects

Police in Sudbury, Ont., say they are looking for additional suspects after a double homicide in the city on Friday.

The Greater Sudbury Police Service says officers were called to a building on Paris Street just before 10:30 p.m. on Friday after gunshots were heard.

The bodies of a man and a woman were located in the building.

© Gino Donato

The Sudbury police are shown headquarters in Sudbury, Ont., Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Gino Donato
  •  

The belief in the right to self-defence – and the legal limits of a reasonable response

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre called Canada's law on self-defence

In 2011, on the federal election campaign trial, Stephen Harper’s Conservatives promised Canadians “the right to defend their property.” The next year, after his party won a majority government, Mr. Harper rewrote Canada’s law on self-defence.

The previous version, dating back to the Liberals in 2003, stated that anyone who is unlawfully assaulted, without provocation, was “justified in repelling force by force” – but no more than necessary. The response also could not be intended to cause death or grievous bodily harm.

  •  

Canadian motorcycle racer Michelle Duff risked death in pursuit of speed

Michelle Duff's final GP ride to 3rd in the Canadian 500GP at Mosport on an Arter Matchless G50 in 1967.

Michelle Duff was the first North American and, so far, the only Canadian to win a motorcycle race on the world championship grand prix circuit.

A triumph at the 1964 Belgian grand prix helped make Duff a popular figure among racing fans in Britain and on the Continent – where the sport enjoyed crowds numbering in the hundreds of thousands – but earned her little notice back home.

  •  

Toronto to allow larger apartment buildings around some transit stations

Condo construction in Toronto's Yorkville neighbourhood in August, 2025. Within a 200-metre radius of transit stations, 30-storey towers are now permitted under certain circumstances.

The Ontario government, alongside Toronto City Hall, recently announced planning reforms in Canada’s largest city that would legalize larger apartment buildings around most transit stations.

Ontario Housing Minister Rob Flack and Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow jointly announced the changes on Aug. 15. They alter Toronto’s official plan in 120 mass transit station areas, or MTSA, around transit stations or stops.

  •  

Southwestern Ontarians leery as province proposes legislation to allow underground carbon storage

Destroyed buildings in the centre of Wheatley, Ont., in October, 2021, two months after a gas leak in the basement of a defunct pub caused a massive explosion.

When hydrogen sulphide − also known as sour gas − started bubbling up from underground behind the local library in Wheatley in late June and forced a brief evacuation of nearby homes, it was a stress-inducing déjà vu for this small Ontario town about an hour from Windsor.

Four years ago, a similar leak in the basement of a defunct pub caused a massive explosion that destroyed two buildings and injured 20 people − and drew attention to the danger posed by the thousands of old and often improperly capped oil and gas wells that dot much of Southwestern Ontario.

  •  

Do school cellphone bans work? The results are mixed

Teacher Tina Somers prepares her classroom for her grade 8-9 English Language Arts students at John D Bracco School in Edmonton, Alta. Ms. Somers has seen firsthand the positive difference a cellphone ban can have on students.

Before last fall, when cellphones weren’t yet officially banned during classes in Orly Kaye’s Toronto high school, the students’ glowing screens were ubiquitous. They scrolled TikTok and Instagram Reels, made lunch plans via group chats, played games or watched YouTube videos. Some kids, the 16-year-old says, wouldn’t even turn down the volume or use earbuds. The refrain of “put your phones away, please” from desperate teachers was near-constant, and mostly ignored.

Orly wasn’t immune to their phone’s pull either. When they’d get bored during science class, they’d start scrolling. “I’d be half paying attention to class, and half paying attention to Pinterest and drawing,” says Orly, who is going into grade 12.

© Amber Bracken

Teacher Tina Somers prepares her classroom for her grade 8-9 English Language Arts students at John D Bracco School in Edmonton, Alberta on Thursday, August 28, 2025. Somers says cellphones are a distraction in the classroom. Amber Bracken for The Globe and Mail
  •  

Alberta minister calls teachers union ‘manipulative’ as strike or lockout looms amid book ban

A teachers’ strike or a lockout is looming in Alberta just days before the start of school. The conflict between the province and union is coming to a head as the government mandates book restrictions in school libraries and implements sweeping rules around students’ pronouns and transgender identity.

Contract negotiations between the Alberta Teachers’ Association and the province’s bargaining team have reached a significant impasse, said Education and Childcare Minister Demetrios Nicolaides. He characterized the union as “manipulative” after it declined to accept an offer during mediated talks this week.

“Parents should be furious that union leaders are gambling with their kids’ future,” Mr. Nicolaides told reporters in Calgary, joining Alberta’s Finance Minister Nate Horner on Friday to emphasize that the province cannot afford to pay teachers more than a proposed 12-per-cent salary increase over four years.

© Jeff McIntosh

New Minister of Education and Childcare, Demetrios Nicolaides, swears the oath of office in Calgary, Alta., Friday, May 16, 2025.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
  •  

Jimmy Lai trial is latest sign of Hong Kong’s heartbreaking descent

Media tycoon Jimmy Lai stands accused of 'conspiracy to collude with foreign forces' under Hong Kong’s national security law.

Hong Kong is a special sort of place. A tiny enclave on China’s flank, it rose in the course of a generation from steamy colonial port to modern economic dynamo – a magnet for struggling migrants from mainland China, a financial hub for East Asia, a bustling entrepôt with trading links around the world.

When I arrived there in the early 1980s to work on a regional newsmagazine, signs of its rising wealth were all around. Skyscrapers were going up left and right. Rolls-Royce limousines carried freshly minted millionaires through the clogged streets. Even the tin-roofed shanties that spilled down the hillsides boasted new television sets.

  •  

B.C. developer Westbank sells stake in Squamish Nation housing project

The Senakw Indigenous-led housing development is being built on the traditional lands of the Squamish Nation, and will have more than 6,000 rental units when completed in 2030.

The private developer who had partnered with British Columbia’s Squamish Nation to build the country’s most ambitious Indigenous-owned apartment project to date has sold the last of his stake to a major Ontario pension fund.

The move by Ian Gillespie’s Westbank Corp. is the latest in a series of divestments by the company as it grapples with a dramatic slowdown of the Vancouver residential market. The Squamish announced Thursday that the Senakw project, which is just completing the first three towers of a planned 11, will now be a “restructured partnership.”

  •  

Police charge 71-year-old man in hate-motivated stabbing of Jewish woman in Ottawa

The attack has been labelled 'senseless' by Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Prime Minister Mark Carney.

A 71-year-old man from Cornwall, Ont., is facing charges after he allegedly stabbed an elderly woman in Ottawa in what police consider to be a hate-motivated crime.

Police say a woman in her 70s entered a grocery store on Baseline Road with a friend at around 1:35 p.m. on Wednesday when she was approached by a man who stabbed her, causing serious injuries.

  •  

Concerns raised about search and rescue in Canada as Norwegian hiker mourned

Steffen Skjottelvik was reported missing in mid-August. He was found dead on Sunday.

In late July, Steffen Skjottelvik set out on what he knew would be a perilous journey through the Canadian North.

Carrying a rifle and his backpack, and with his two huskies by his side, the Norwegian hiker planned to traverse 300 kilometres along the coast of Hudson Bay, from Fort Severn, Ont., to York Factory, a remote national historic site in Manitoba, about 250 km southeast of Churchill.

  •  

B.C. public-sector workers approve strike action, union gives 72-hour notice

The BC General Employees’ Union says provincial public-sector workers have voted to approve strike action.

Union president and public service bargaining committee chair Paul Finch says a 72-hour notice has been issued of potential strike action beginning 12:01 a.m. on Tuesday.

Finch says there was 92.7-per-cent support for strike action, and 86.4 per cent of Public Service Agency members in the union voted.

© Adrian Wyld

British Columbia's provincial flag flies on a flag pole in Ottawa on July 6, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
  •  

Montreal teen charged in terror case faces new charge of assaulting a peace officer, Crown says

A 17-year-old boy who allegedly intended to carry out an attack on behalf of the Islamic State is facing a new charge of assaulting a peace officer, a federal Crown prosecutor said Friday.

Prosecutor Marc Cigana told reporters at Montreal’s youth court that the alleged assault occurred at RCMP headquarters in Westmount, Que., after the teen was arrested on Aug. 20.

“The charge is a charge of assaulting a police officer in the fulfilment of his duties causing bodily harm,” Cigana said.

© Christinne Muschi

An RCMP logo in shown on a vehicle in Montreal, Thursday, March 7, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi
  •  

Poilievre wants Criminal Code to define ‘reasonable’ self-defence

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre says the Criminal Code should be amended so that the use of force is presumed to be reasonable to defend your home and family if someone breaks into it.

The federal government needs to amend the Criminal Code so the use of force is presumed to be reasonable to defend your home and family if someone breaks into it, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Friday.

Poilievre called a news conference in Brampton, Ont., amid an outcry over assault charges that were laid against an Ontario man who encountered another man who allegedly broke into his apartment while carrying a crossbow.

  •  

Inside the making of Toronto’s Carnival sound systems

On a Friday afternoon, the sun blazes down on a Mississauga truck yard. With less than 24 hours before Toronto’s annual Carnival parade, Freedom Mas hasn’t started building its sound system. The semi-truck bed for the float is four hours late, and the rented speakers aren’t what were ordered.

Khalil Bernard is pacing anxiously across the yard. As lead DJ for Freedom Mas, the only masquerade band (mas band) playing primarily Jamaican music in the Grand Parade, Bernard carries the weight of ensuring their sound system delivers not just tunes, but a statement of cultural pride.

“Will they know that we were pulling out hair and crying behind the scenes and all of this before the parade started?” he asked.

© Sarah Espedido

In a Scarborough truck yard, Avinash Jaikarran, leads the construction of the truss system for Tribal Carnival’s truck.
July 30, 2025
(Sarah Espedido/The Globe and Mail)
  •  

The complex crisis facing men today

Thomas Verny is a clinical psychiatrist, academic, award-winning author, public speaker, poet and podcaster. He is the author of eight books, including the global bestseller The Secret Life of the Unborn Child and 2021’s The Embodied Mind: Understanding the Mysteries of Cellular Memory, Consciousness and Our Bodies.

Today, as a society, we are under a great deal of stress. Men and women, LGBTQ people, racialized people, Indigenous people and new immigrants are experiencing these rapidly changing times differently. An in-depth discussion of these differences would take a book, not a column, so, in this piece I have elected to focus on men.

  •  

Ski-Doo maker BRP reports better-than-expected profit in second quarter despite trade war

A Ski-Doo assembly line at a BRP facility in Valcourt, Que., in 2020. The snowmobile maker says its latest quarter delivered better-than-expected results.

BRP Inc. DOO-T says it delivered better than anticipated results despite the economic environment, leaving it confident enough to issue full-year guidance. 

“Since we are starting to see the benefit of our action, and despite ongoing volatility, we are comfortable issuing guidance,” said outgoing president and chief executive José Boisjoli on an earnings call Friday.

  •  

Privacy provision in online streaming law accidentally removed, federal government says

Parliament Hill in Ottawa. The Heritage Department said it is now aware of 'an inadvertent oversight' that removed a privacy provision in its Online Streaming Act.

The federal government says it’s “looking into” what appears to be the accidental removal of a privacy provision in its Online Streaming Act.

Earlier this week, University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist outlined in a blog post that a privacy provision in the legislation was removed only two months after the bill became law, through an amendment contained in another bill.

  •  

Canada’s economy contracts more than expected in second quarter as tariffs hit exports

The Port of Vancouver. Canada’s economy contracted in the second quarter by a much larger degree than anticipated, according to Statistics Canada.

Canada’s economy contracted in the second quarter by a much larger degree than anticipated on an annualized basis as U.S. tariffs squeezed exports, but higher household and government spending cushioned some of the impact, data showed on Friday.

The GDP for the quarter that ended June 30 decelerated by 1.6 per cent on an annualized basis from a downwardly revised growth of 2.0 per cent posted in the first quarter, Statistics Canada said, taking the total annualized growth in the first six months of the year to 0.4 per cent.

  •  

Canada’s child protection advocates urge dark-web administrators to block millions of child-abuse images

The dark web can only be accessed through special browsers, which connect to networks that are designed to preserve the anonymity of users and the most popular of those networks is TOR.

Canadian child-protection advocates are urging the administrators of the network that underpins much of the dark web to block access to millions of child-abuse images and the thousands of websites that post them.

They are warning that pedophile material is proliferating on the anonymous web, including tips on how to abuse minors and evade the police, which is jeopardizing the safety of huge numbers of children worldwide.

  •  

Morning Update: How we tell stories from Gaza

Good morning. As one of the few news organizations in the world with a contributing reporter on the ground in Gaza, sharing these stories is a unique privilege and a challenge – and today we take you behind the scenes on our coverage. More on that below, plus improving international relations and preparing for back to school. But first:

Today’s headlines

© Hatem Khaled

Equipment used by Palestinian cameraman Hussam al-Masri, who was a contractor for Reuters, lies at the site where he was killed, along with other journalists and people, in Israeli strikes on Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, in this still image taken from video, August 25.
  •