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UNRWA teacher’s passport found on Hamas leader Sinwar’s slain body after Israeli forces killed him, photos show

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A UN Relief and Rehabilitation Agency teacher's passport was reportedly found on the body of Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who masterminded the Oct. 7 attack and was killed by Israeli forces on Wednesday, according to photos.

A passport believed to belong to embattled UNRWA teacher Hani Zorob was reportedly found by Israeli authorities on the terrorist leader's body on Thursday. Photo posted on X By KAN News' Israel Correspondent.

It was not immediately clear whether the passport was real or fake.

A passport believed to belong to a UNRWA teacher was found on Shinwar's body. Nurit Yohanan, /X
IDF officials said Shinwar was likely fleeing north as Israeli forces advanced on Rafah. AP

UNRWA has come under fire after reports that at least a dozen of its staff members supported terrorist attacks against Israel, but the correspondent said the teacher escaped from Gaza via Rafah in April. , reportedly living in Egypt.

Mr. Sinwar was killed by Israeli soldiers along with two other Hamas terrorists with him in Gaza, more than a year after a coordinated attack on the Jewish state that sparked a war.

Israeli authorities confirmed the death on Thursday.

IDF soldiers confirmed on Thursday that they had killed Shinwar, the ringleader of the October 7 attack. iPress News/Shutterstock
NY Post Complex

An Israeli drone captured alive the Hamas leader's final moments before he was killed as he tried to remove the device by throwing a piece of wood.

Israeli Defense Forces spokesman Maj. Gen. Daniel Hagari told reporters on Thursday that Shinwar may have been trying to flee north during the Israeli army's advance into Rafah, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians had fled earlier this year. He said that he has a high level of sexuality.

Mr. Sinwar tried in vain to remove the device by throwing objects at it with the drone, but later died. x/LTC_Shoshani

Mr. Sinwar's death was hailed by U.S. and Israeli officials as a major blow to Hamas, potentially ending the war in Gaza and freeing the remaining 97 hostages abducted on October 7. are.

The Post has contacted UNRWA for comment.

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