Activism

UPDATE: Hamas, family misled AP reporter on death of five month old child

UPDATE: Hamas blames fuel shortage for Gaza baby’s death
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — A Gaza man said Sunday his 5-month-old baby died two days ago after the generator powering his respirator ran out of fuel, but the report was called into question after it emerged that the timing of the baby’s death was misrepresented.

The baby’s death — which was confirmed to The Associated Press by a man identified as the father and a Gaza hospital official — would have been the first linked to the territory’s energy crisis, and the report appeared to be an attempt by Gaza’s Hamas rulers to use it to gain sympathy.

However, the AP later learned that news of Mohammed Helou’s death first appeared March 4 in the local Arabic-language newspaper Al-Quds, in an article written by a relative of the bereaved family. . .

The Al-Quds article contained the same details as the one recounted by the Helou family on Sunday, saying Mohammed died from choking on his own phlegm. The story quoted that father as saying their generator ran out of fuel, causing their son’s respirator to stop working and ultimately causing the baby to choke to death.

The fuel crisis was relevant in early March as well, but Hamas apparently missed the report in Al-Quds — a publication considered loyal to its rival, Fatah — and Hamas was now trying to recycle the story to capitalize on the family’s tragedy.

Confronted by the AP with the newspaper story, the family and Hamas Gaza health official Bassem al-Qadri continued to insist the baby arrived dead at a Gaza City hospital on Friday night.

AP reporter Diaa Hadad who covered the story and the Hamas spin commented on Twitter:

Gaza baby dies as power cut shuts breathing aid
GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — A seven-month-old baby in Gaza died on Friday evening after medical equipment he was connected to switched off as a result of a power cut, a Hamas-affiliated TV channel said. Gaza medical spokesman Adham Abu Salmiya confirmed the incident, adding that the infant was born with respiratory problems and doctors had recommended the use of mechanical breathing apparatus to be used at home. The father of the child had turned on the apparatus before going to sleep but during the night a power cut caused it to switch off, resulting in the infant’s death, Hamas’ Al-Aqsa TV reported. 
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=470680

Israel’s claimed easing is false. Besieged Gazans remain isolated. The Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) assessed conditions in January. Except for limited amounts of agricultural products, Gaza’s export economy’s suffering. In addition, imports of basic needs and raw materials fall well below minimal needs. Karm Abu Salem crossing was closed nearly 30% of the time. Incoming truckloads are 28.5% of pre-siege levels.

http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2012/03/gaza-siege-harshness-continues.html 

Ethnic Cleansing / Destruction of Homes / Theft of Natural Resources / Refugees
IOA serves demolition notice to Palestinian family in Bethlehem
The Israeli occupation authority (IOA) served demolition notice to a Palestinian family in Nahalin village to the west of Bethlehem on Friday.

 
There are approximately 50 outposts – essentially baby settlements – in the West Bank, all illegal according to Israeli law. Migron, established in 2002, is supposed to be dismantled by the end of March, 2012. So why isn’t that going to happen? 
 

Israel’s Exploitation Highlighted on Water Day
In the wake of World Water Day, both local and international organisations have issued reports and organised demonstrations to raise attention to the exploitation and demolition of water resources by Israeli settlers to the detriment of Palestinians living in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT).

http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/component/content/article/28-news/4228-israels-exploitation-highlighted-on-water-day
 

Thabet: Stop oppressing Palestinians in Iraq
Thabet organization for Palestinian refugees right of return has called for ending the oppression befalling Palestinian refugees in Iraq.

 
Violence / Aggression Against Palestinians

Two Children Injured By Army Fire Near Ramallah
A Palestinian child was wounded in the face by a rubber-coated metal bullet fired by Israeli soldiers who attacked nonviolent protesters against the Wall and Settlements in Nabi Saleh village, near the central West Bank city of Ramallah; a second child was shot and injured in the leg.
http://www.imemc.org/article/63197
 

A family’s nightmare: Beaten and kidnapped by illegal settlers near Qadumim as Israeli military facilitates the crime
A family of four were kidnapped by settlers on Thursday afternoon while having a picnic close by an outpost near Qadumim. When soldiers arrived at the scene they chased away the relatives of the kidnapped family with tear gas and rubber coated steel bullets alongside settlers throwing stones. It was around 4.30 pm on Thursday that the El Seddi family, who were eating almonds on their families land in the outskirts of Jit, east of Nablus, was kidnapped by a gang of settlers. The settlers approached the family on four wheelers in a group of about ten young men with their shirts wrapped around their heads to conceal their faces.

 
Jewish settlers shoot at, wound Palestinian villager
A Palestinian man in his forties was wounded in his shoulder when Jewish settlers shot at Palestinian villagers in Burka village to the east of Ramallah city on Saturday.

 
The bullet shot from a short distance hit the boy in the face penetrating his right cheek and piercing it. Israeli Border Police officers shot a rubber-coated bullet at 15 year-old Ezz Tamimi’s face from a distance of about 20 meters, during the weekly demonstration in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh today. The bullet, which hit the boy’s cheek, went through it, gouging a large hole in it. The Israeli army’s own open-fire regulations forbid the use of rubber-coated bullets against minors.
 
Israeli soldiers attack South African and Portuguese ambassadors with tear gas
The South African and Portuguese ambassadors to occupied Palestine were reportedly attacked with tear gas grenades by Israeli soldiers during their participation in Kafr Qaddum march.
Soldiers Invade Several Towns Near Hebron
Israeli army invaded on Thursday at night several towns near the southern West Bank city of Hebron, and also invaded several neighborhoods in the city, clashes were reported.

 
A few nights ago the Israeli military raided the home of imprisoned Palestinian protest leader Bassam Tamimi. During the raid in Nabi Saleh, in the occupied territories, a relative of Tamimi filmed four soldiers traipsing through the family home—pawing around in the children’s bedroom. While the kids are sleeping, the soldiers read through their school notebooks, confiscating one with a pink top cover. And they break a shelf in the closet. They are clumsy and oafish.
 

Nabi Saleh Stands Strong in the Face of Nightly Raids
Friday 23 March 2012–The tiny village of Nabi Saleh once again assembled together to hold another of its weekly nonviolent protests against the neighboring illegal Israeli settlement of Halamish, as well as Israel’s occupation at large.
http://www.palestinemonitor.org/?p=4441

 
It was under a bright, sunny sky that the people of Kufr Qaddoum once again gathered to protest against the roadblock which isolates them from the rest of the West Bank. The past week there had been much frustration and anger since Murad Ashtawi, member of the Popular Committee, was arrested during last week’s demonstration.
 
Palestinian Hunger Strikers
 
Israel may force feed a Palestinian hunger striker in a bid to prevent her from continuing her protest, Amnesty International said on Friday. The rights group condemned any attempts to force Hana Shalabi, who has been on hunger strike for 37 days in protest of her continued detention without trial, to eat as “cruel” and called on Israel to either charge or release her. ”There are reports that the Israeli authorities may be considering force-feeding her, which could constitute cruel and inhuman treatment. As a general rule, hunger strikers should not be forcibly fed,” a statement from the group said.
 
Ashqar: Number of solidarity hunger strikers on the rise
The number of Palestinian prisoners going on hunger strike in solidarity with detained hunger strikers Hana’a Shalabi and MP Ahmed Al-Haj had risen to 26 in various prisons.

 
Political Prisoners & Detainees
 
The Israeli occupation forces escalated their arrest campaigns in lines of Palestinians since the start of 2012 and rounded up around 900 including children, women, lawmakers, and liberated prisoners.

 
Early Monday morning, on the 20th of March, Israeli soldiers raided a Palestinian home in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, terrorized a family and arrested a young woman named Amani Al Khandaqja. The soldiers arrived at 2am, whilst the family was sleeping, they surrounded and then entered the house. One of Amani’s brothers was awoken by loud voices outside his window, upon looking out he saw a number of soldiers interrogating members of a neighboring household. As he ran to wake up his father, Saleh, a series of loud, hard bangs could be heard on the front door of the household.  After repeated banging, Saleh went down to open the door, and the Israeli Occupying Forces violently forced entry into Amani’s home. The entire family of 9 were forced onto the roof of their own home with their hands held above their heads and held at gun point.
 
The Palestinian Ministry of Detainees reported Saturday that Palestinian political prisoners in Nafha, Majiddo, Galboa’, and Ramon Israeli prisons, returned their meals on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday morning, in protest to forced DNA tests conducted on them by, under gunpoint, the Israeli soldiers.
 

Confined Cruelty: Israeli Treatment of Palestinian Minors, Graham Peebles
For many Palestinian children their childhood is lived under a cloak of fear, and the threat of violence and abuse at the hands of an armed force that stalks the streets of their homeland. In the eleven years since 2000, Israeli forces have killed “1,471” (1) children in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, the bulk of which are aged between 13 and 17 years old. The children of Gaza have been and continue to be at greater risk, with almost a thousand murdered in the last twelve years, on the streets of their city, on their way to and from school, whilst playing with friends, shopping for their family or simply relaxing in their homes. Most are shot randomly, indiscriminately, or killed as a result of Israeli air and ground attacks. Around 50 were taken prematurely from their families by unexploded ordnance.

 
Popular Protests / Activism / Solidarity / BDS
 
Dozens of local residents, and International peace activists, held the weekly nonviolent protest against the Annexation Wall and Settlements in Al-Ma’sara village, near Bethlehem; Israeli soldiers attacked the protestors leading to clashes leading to clashes between local youths and the army, no injuries were reported.

Beit Ommar Weekly Demonstration Against the Occupation

On Saturday, March 24, 2012, Palestinian, Israeli and international activists held a demonstration in Beit Ommar against the Karmei Tsur settlement. Karmei Tsur is built on stolen Palestinian land and makes it impossible for the farmers of Beit Ommar to access parts of their land. The settlement is highly secured by military forces and fences. Today’s demonstration was against the settlement, and against any further encroachments on Palestinian land. It also marked the 38th day of Hana Shalabi’s hunger strike in protest of her administrative detention. Additionally, demonstrators protested the expulsion of eight minors from Beit Ommar, to be followed up in Ofer Military Court tomorrow.

 

Campaign Against the Israeli Occupation Military Decision to Deport 8 Minors from Beit Ommar

The Ofer Israeli occupation military court demanding the deportation of 8 boys from the area of ??their residence in Beit Ommar. In a precedent the first of its kind against Palestinian children, Ofer Military Court, which was held on Tuesday, called for the deportation of 8 young minors from their homes In Beit Ommar for a distance of at least 30 kilometers from the town, according to Israeli military prosecution claim: that these young minors are a danger to the security of the settlers who are going through from Hebron Jerusalem Road.
 
The words come from Hana Shalabi, on hunger strike for 38 days. On Monday, March 19, 2012, there was a demonstration in Hebron in support of her and others in administrative detention. 18th of October 2009 Hana was released after more than two years in administrative detention, connected to the prison exchange (1027 Palestinians for Gilad Shalit). 16th of February this year, 50 soldiers with dogs showed up at her door, arresting her once again, without charge or further explanation. She went on hunger strike immediately, in protest against the violent and chargeless arrest. After one week her lawyers received a court order putting her in administrative detention.
 

A demonstration was organised on Thursday afternoon at Ibn Rushd Square, in the southern West Bank city of al-Khalil to protest political detention by the PA in Ramallah.

 

Global March to Jerusalem Set for 30 March
On 30 March thousands people from throughout the world will join Palestinians from the Middle East and the Diaspora in a Global March to Jerusalem (GMJ), in a day of non-violent demonstrations in Palestine and in the surrounding countries aimed to promote Palestinian self-determination.

http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/topics/jerusalem/4229-global-march-to-jerusalem-set-for-30-march
 
Imperfect revolution: Palestine’s 15 March movement one year on, Linah Alsaafin
One year after the 15 March movement’s call for national unity, what has the youth-led mobilization achieved?

 
Phan Nguyen exposed a good deal of the seamy underside of the StandWithUs-Ministry of Foreign Affairs pinkwashing campaign here in the Pacific NW that ended with the Seattle city LGBT Commission cancelling a gala reception it had planned with an Israeli LGBT delegation brought here to showcase Israel as a haven for gay rights (in opposition to the supposed repression of said rights in the Arab world).  The Seattle city commission took this action after a hearing at which proponents and opponents of the visit by the Israeli delegation got to air their views.  Opponents did not object to meeting with the Israeli delegation.  They objected to the government funding of the tour and the political/hasbara ramifications that went along with such funding. 

 
Over the past several years, the Israeli far-right think tank, the Institute for Zionist Strategies, has accused Tel Aviv University (TAU) and other academic institutions of being hotbeds of anti-Zionism.  Here is how I described the campaign waged by IZS in a 2010 post
 
Canada: Grad Students Vote to Divest from Israeli Occupation
On March 21st and 22nd, graduate students at Carleton University overwhelmingly voiced their support for the Palestinian people, by voting for the university’s pension fund to divest from four companies that are complicit in the occupation of Palestine. With the vote taking place through a referendum question, all graduate students had the power to make their voices heard, and in the end, over 72% took a principled stance, by voting for Carleton to stand on the side of justice, equality, and accountability.
 
My friend Selma and I were gripping each other’s hands tightly last Thursday night, March 15th, as Seattle’s LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender) Commission voted on whether to cancel an Israeli pinkwashing event that was scheduled to happen the next day at Seattle City Hall. We had both spoken in favor of cancelling the event, and I knew that Selma, a queer Palestinian American activist, couldn’t help but feel like they were deciding on the legitimacy of her personal history.
 
Other News and Political Developments
 
TEL AVIV, Israel (Ma’an) — Israeli police have made no arrests after hundreds of football supporters attacked Palestinian workers at a shopping mall in Jerusalem, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported Friday. The assault in Malha mall on Monday was “a mass lynching attempt,” cleaner Mohammed Yusuf told Haaretz.
 

US aid to Palestinians released
US lawmakers release $88.6m (£56m) in development aid for the Palestinians that has been frozen for more than six months.

 
The Iron Dome Support Act (IDSA), which authorizes the President to provide Israel assistance to procure additional Iron Dome defense systems, wins bipartisan support.
 
Hamas reveals documents on conspiracy by PA, Fatah against Gaza
Hamas said it has documents and minutes of meetings proving the involvement of the Fatah-controlled PA with the Mossad, the US intelligence, and Arab parties in Gaza fuel and power crisis.

 
BEIRUT (Ma’an) — A safe believed to belong to late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was found in southern Lebanon on Saturday, a Lebanese TV channel reported. The locked container was discovered by a Lebanese man near the site of a former Fatah military base when Arafat lived in the country, Al-Jadeed TV said. The one-meter wide, 2-meter long safe weighs seven and a half tons, and was transferred from the site in Al-Raml Al-Ali for inspection by a security committee with representatives from Hizbullah and Amal movements, the TV report said.
 
Analysis / Op-ed / Human Interest
 
Israel exploits Toulouse murders to justify no-charge jailing of hunger striker Hana al-Shalabi, Ali Abunimah
What does the spokesman of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu do when his propaganda efforts fail to conceal Israel’s abuses of Palestinians? He uses the blood of Jewish children murdered in the French city of Toulouse last week to try to blot them out. This is low, even for Israeli official propaganda.

“Dismayed” B’Tselem scolds Palestinian rights groups for “conduct,” speaking out over Olmert gala, Ali Abunimah
B’Tselem’s Executive Director Jessica Montell has admonished the Palestinian human rights groups for speaking out against the Israeli human rights’ group’s participation in J Street’s conference featuring war crimes suspect Ehud Olmert.

 
During a recent demonstration in Hebron (Al Khalil) demanding the opening of Shuhada street, protesters were subjected to something that could only have been thought up in the United States – a weapon which comes with its own commercial.  Amid the sound of concussion grenades exploding, an automated voice announces: ”This is a test of the long range acoustic device, LRAD, from American Technologies Corporation.”  The strange automated message serves as a reminder that the Israeli occupation is not just a local or regional issue but one with important international dimensions.
 
Over a three-week period that started at the beginning of the year, The Palestine Monitor has conducted a workshop focused on photography and journalism for youth in the northern city of Jenin, occupied West Bank. Approximately 25 local high school and university students took part in the training. Students were not only instructed on the basics of photographic composition and lighting, but also discovered the necessary types of images for a well-composed photo story. Participants also spent several days analyzing the fundamental aspects of journalistic writing, drawing distinctions between unbiased news reporting and subjective advocacy. By imparting these skill sets, The Palestine Monitor hopes to bring about a new generation of Palestinian journalists and in return, facilitate their ability to make their own voices and stories heard.
 

The Contemptible Netanyahu and Friends, Richard Lightbown
On 11 March a French soldier was shot dead in Toulouse by a lone gunman who escaped on a scooter. On 15 March two more soldiers were shot dead were shot in Montauban, 50 Km from Toulouse, apparently by the same gunman. On 19 March, in what appears to have been a third attack by the same killer, one teacher and three pupils were shot dead at the Ozar Hatorah Jewish school in Toulouse. Another pupil was also shot and injured. Later on 19 March, Baroness Catherine Ashton, the High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy made a scheduled speech at the opening of a conference organized by UNRWA in cooperation with the European Union. The event was entitled ‘Engaging Youth: Palestinian Refugees in a Changing Middle East’.

 
Young Palestinians act out their struggle on another stage
A year ago the Israeli-born director of a tiny theatre in a West Bank refugee camp was gunned down. Now young Palestinians are fighting to save the place where they can voice their anger, frustration and dreams in creative ways. On 4 April 2011, Juliano Mer-Khamis turned up unexpectedly at the Freedom theatre in Jenin and went inside to talk with his students and staff. Usually he’d call ahead whenever he planned a return to Jenin, but this time, driving up from Ramallah where he had just premiered a new production of a play by Eugène Ionesco, he gave no advance warning.

 
Bahrain
 

‘Bahraini forces beat, rape child’
Bahraini activists say the regime forces have tortured and sexually assaulted a child as the nation witnesses more crimes committed by the Saudi-backed Al Khalifa regime.

Clashes after funeral of Bahraini mother
Bahraini protesters battled with riot police near Manama on Friday after the funeral of a mother whose family said she died when security forces fired tear gas into her home twice in the past week.  A UN rights body this week expressed concern over the use of excessive force and tear gas by Bahraini security forces. Police moved in with water cannons and armored vehicles to break up hundreds of protesters as they approached a checkpoint near Pearl Roundabout, the hub of pro-democracy protests last year.
http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/clashes-after-funeral-bahraini-mother?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AlAkhbarEnglish+%28Al+Akhbar+English%29 
 
Tear gas kills two Bahrainis: opposition
A man and a woman died of asphyxiation caused by tear gas grenades fired by Bahrain’s security forces to disperse protests in Shiite villages, the country’s main opposition group said on Saturday.

 

Bahrainis mourn for crackdown victim

Thousands of Bahrainis have taken to the streets to mourn for an elderly woman killed by toxic tear gas fired by Saudi-backed Bahraini forces.

 

Bahrain activists hold pro-reform marches
Activists and opposition supporters demonstrate in locations across nation to demand equal rights for Shias.

 
Nabil Rajab to Al-Manar Website: Bahrain Battle only against King
Nabil Rajab is a Bahraini rights activist, who currently heads Bahrain Center for Human Rights and Gulf Center for Human Rights, and is a legal counsel in the Human Rights Watch.

Iraqi police detained on suspicion of freeing prisoners
Iraq detained 22 policemen on Saturday after 19 inmates, including two men on death row, escaped from a prison in the northern city of Kirkuk a day earlier, the local police chief said. ”We are investigating 22 policemen who have been detained, to find out about the escape of the terrorists,” Kirkuk provincial police chief Jamal Taher Bakr said, adding that local police were hunting for those on the run.

 

Displaced Iraqis still suffering from sectarian war
Talib al-Ajami stands near his makeshift house in a garbage and sewage-filled slum in north Baghdad holding a torn, creased letter from insurgents who drove him from his home in 2006.

 
Saudi Arabia
Saudi police invade hospital to arrest man in “critical” condition

A Saudi activist was dragged from a hospital by security forces despite being in critical condition, activists said on Friday. Mohammad Al-Zanadi had been receiving treatment after being shot in a clash with Saudi police on Thursday. Security forces swarmed the Qatif Central Hospital before arresting Al-Zanadi, according to activists on social networking sites. One opposition Facebook site released a statement claiming Al-Zanadi had been dragged away despite being close to death.
 

Saudi forces shoot activist in Awamiyah
Saudi forces are searching hospitals in Awamiyah to arrest activist Mohammed Saleh Zenadi after he sustained injuries from live rounds fired by the regime forces.

 
Saudis slam al-Saud brutal suppression
Saudi demonstrators have taken to the streets to condemn the violent crackdown on anti-regime rallies and the shooting of a human rights activist in the oil-rich Eastern Province.
 
Syria
 
Shattered residents regroup after Syrian offensive in Idlib
They describe a government onslaught marked by bouts of terror, wanton destruction behind closed doors and strange moments of kindness by soldiers. In a playground of slides and swings, children dug in the sand next to a string of simple dirt mounds that covered the bodies of at least 40 people.

 

Army shells Homs as Annan goes to Russia
Syrian forces continue assaults on opposition strongholds, as UN envoy heads to Moscow for talks on halting violence.

 

Assad family targeted by new EU sanctions
Syrian president’s wife and mother among latest figures to be targeted by European Union assets freeze and travel bans.

 

Iran warns against intervention in Syria
Iran on Thursday stressed its opposition to any foreign intervention in Syria, its chief Middle East ally, and called for a “political” solution to the bloody conflict there. ”The Islamic Republic of Iran once again reiterates its emphasis on solving the current Syrian situation via political means and refraining from any hasty move and intervention,” foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said, according to the website of state television network IRIB.

 

Sharmine Narwani, “Turning Point on the Syrian Front: Dealmaking in Search of a Face-Saving Exit”
The clashes between government forces and opposition militias in Baba Amr were a clear tipping point for these players — much hinged on the outcome of that battle. Today, the retreat of armed groups from the Homs neighborhood means one thing: the strategy of militarizing the conflict from within is no longer a plausible option on which to hang this geopolitical battle. Especially not in an American or French election year, when anything less than regime change in Syria will look like abject failure. . . . Group A is looking for a face-saving exit from the promised escalation in Syria. It consists of the United States, the European Union, and Turkey. Group B, on the other hand, is heavily invested in regime change at any cost and includes Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and some elements of the French, US, British, and Libyan establishments. . . . As Group A moves toward a face-saving exit from the crisis, we are going to witness a re-telling of events in Syria. The Western “mainstream media” and major international NGOs, which have served as little more than propaganda tools for various governments seeking to escalate the Syrian crisis and vilify the Assad government, are suddenly “discovering” dangerous elements in the Syrian opposition. This scene-setting is just as deliberate as the false narratives we have witnessed from Group A since the start of the crisis.

 
U.S. and other Arab / World News
 
Iraqi woman severely beaten in Calif. home dies
A 32-year-old woman from Iraq who was found severely beaten in her California home with a note left next to her saying “go back to your country” has died.

 
Patriot Acts: Narratives of Post-9/11 Injustice tells the stories of individuals in the United States whose rights have been abused as a result of the racist, Islamophobic backlash and the so-called War on Terror that followed the attacks of 11 September 2001.
 

US to resume military aid to Egypt
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will allow $1.3bn in military aid to go to Egypt despite controversy over NGOs case.

 

Liberals walk out of Egypt assembly selection
Parliamentarians meet to name 100-member panel to write constitution, but liberals say Islamists are dominating process.

 

Young Jordanians demonstrate for reform
At least 200 Jordanian demonstrators from a pro-reform youth group held a sit-in in central Amman on Saturday amid heavy security, demanding political change and condemning corruption.

 

Turkish forces kill 15 Kurdish women fighters
Female unit of Kurd separatist movement PKK wiped out by Turkish army in Bitlis province, interior ministry says.

 
www.TheHeadlines.Org
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Thank you for the update to this story. There is enough pain and suffering on both sides without anyone manipulating a baby’s death.