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Israeli airstrike kills Gazan photographer known for newborn portraits

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Israeli airstrike kills Gazan photographer known for newborn portraits

2025-10-03 17:46 Last Updated At:18:47

Yahya Barzaq, a Palestinian photographer whose lens once celebrated the joy of newborns and the beauty of life in Gaza,was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Tuesday, marking another tragic loss in a devastating conflict that has claimed over 60,000 lives.

Barzaq's funeral was held the following day in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, where mourners gathered in grief, devastated by the death of a man who had dedicated his camera not only to art, but to truth.

At the time of the attack, Barzaq was inside a local cafe in Deir al-Balah, uploading photographic material when the area was struck. Multiple people were killed instantly, including the photographer.

In an exclusive interview with China Media Group last December, Barzaq spoke about why he chose to specialize in newborn photography and his resolve to document the realities of life in Gaza since the latest round of the Israel-Hamas conflict began.

"I chose to photograph newborns because I love photography, especially in Gaza, where no one specializes in this field. It was an opportunity for me to become the first person in Gaza to focus on newborn photography. I love beautiful things, and the people of Gaza love all things beautiful. They love children and enjoy capturing the beauty of life," said Barzaq.

The war,however, changed everything. His camera, once trained on angelic infant smiles, was forced to document rubble, corpses, tears, and blood.

One memory haunted him in particular: Mohammad, a child he had photographed, whose parents later printed his portrait onto a T-shirt. Tragically, Mohammad was later killed in an Israeli airstrike -- wearing that very shirt.

"For a long time, I didn't pick up my camera because it's a camera that had once captured beautiful scenes and the angelic smiles of children. And now it must document crimes, destruction, and the miserable life we are enduring. But when people see or hear about our life, it's hard for them to believe all of this. I feel it's my duty to convey this truth to the world—that life is extremely difficult for the children and for Gaza. They are suffering from atrocities, massacres, hunger, insecurity, and a lack of medical care," said Barzaq.

"Before the war," he added, "I thought my work was a pleasure. Now, photography has become a duty, not just a profession. I feel an obligation to show the world that children in Gaza are suffering a devastating blow."

Barzaq's greatest wish was simple: an end to the conflict. But he did not live to see it.

Now, his camera is silent. Yet the photos he had taken stand as a testament to lives lost and a question that echoes across the ruins of Gaza: When will this endless suffering finally end?

Israeli airstrike kills Gazan photographer known for newborn portraits

Israeli airstrike kills Gazan photographer known for newborn portraits

China is willing to open its original technologies to the whole world and share the fruits of innovation with all people, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said Friday at a press conference in Beijing.

Lin noted that innovation has become a keyword for China's economic and social development.

The Recommendations of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) for Formulating the 15th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development adopted in October 2025 mentioned "innovation" 61 times, Lin said.

In recent years, according to the spokesman, China has seen major sci-tech achievements emerge thick and fast, and its global innovation index ranking has risen from 34th in 2012 to 10th in 2025.

"China has long regarded science and technology as the primary productive force. Through strengthened conceptual guidance, policy direction and institutional reforms, it has effectively leveraged its market and talent advantages, enabling enterprises to become the main actors of innovation. Through persistent and long-term efforts, China has forged a successful path with technological innovation leading industrial innovation, and industrial upgrading, in turn, promoting technological iteration. This has made innovation a fundamental driving force behind China's economic development," said Lin.

Lin said while competition may accompany the process of innovation, it is by no means the goal of innovation.

"China's innovation is notably open and open-source, in pursuit of mutual benefit and win-win outcomes. China's space station has attracted the participation of 23 institutions from 17 countries for its first batch of cooperation projects. China's FAST (Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope) is open to observation applications from scientists worldwide. China has initiated the establishment of a global artificial intelligence (AI) cooperation organization and proposed the AI+ International Cooperation Initiative, and is committed to promoting open, inclusive, and beneficial AI development for all. DeepSeek is open to global developers in an open-source manner for use and improvement. These are just a few examples among many," Lin said.

"China is willing to share original technologies and innovation scenarios with the world. Through open cooperation, it aims for mutual empowerment and common growth, ensuring that the fruits of innovation better benefit all humanity," he said.

China willing to open its original technologies to world: FM spokesman

China willing to open its original technologies to world: FM spokesman

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