Word: hadashot
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...Israeli newspaper photographers, however, snapped pictures that showed soldiers and security men hustling two men, one handcuffed and the other with only a trace of blood on his face, away from the scene. Israeli military censors immediately banned publication of the photos, but the editor of Hadashot, a Tel Aviv daily, took one of the pictures to Banny Shuiel, the village in the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip from which the terrorists came. Relatives quickly identified the shackled man in the photo as Majid Abu-Gumaa, one of the four dead Palestinians. Only after the New York Times published an account...
...troubling questions were sparked by pictures taken at the scene by two Israeli newspaper photographers, Alex Libak of Hadashot and Shmuel Rachmani of Ma'ariv. Libak's photograph shows a young man, handcuffed and looking uninjured, being led away from the bus by a pair of security officials dressed in civilian clothes. Rachmani's photograph shows another young man, head down and with a small trace of blood on his face, being hustled away by an Israeli brigadier general and two uniformed soldiers...
Israeli military censors have banned the publication of both pictures. But Hadashot Editor Yossi Klein took Libak's photograph to Banny Shuiel, a village in the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip from which the terrorists came. Relatives and neighbors immediately identified the handcuffed man in the picture as Majid Abu-Gumaa, one of the four terrorists. On the other hand, Klein also showed the photo to the bus driver and four passengers; all five said that the man was not one of the terrorists. "I can't say the matter is clear-cut either way," Klein told TIME Jerusalem...