Society's Child
Janna Jihad, as she is known, is something of a veteran. She began her reporting career at the age of seven.
"There were not enough journalists covering things that happened, like when my friend was killed and when lots of people were injured. Others were arrested and things like that, and it was not reported by anybody," she told RT.

Screenshot of The Guardian’s ‘The Counted’ project, which tracks killings by Police in the United States.
The Washington Post, which tracks fatal shootings by police as part of its Fatal Force project, reports that there have already been 20 more fatal shootings this year compared to the same period of 2015.
In April, the Post's Fatal Force project won a Pulitzer Prize, journalism's most prestigious award, in the national reporting category. The project originated when Post staff realized that no government agency tracks police violence, reported Paul Farhi:
"After covering several high-profile incidents involving the killings of civilians by police officers in 2014, Washington Post staff writer Wesley Lowery was surprised to discover that there were no official statistics about such fatalities. So Lowery pitched an idea to his editors: The newspaper, he suggested, should collect the information itself and analyze it for patterns in law enforcement."
The Oglala Sioux Tribe and activists scored a win on May 26, when federal administrative judges ruled that Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff has failed to take "a hard look" at cultural resources in recommending renewal of a uranium mining license for Crow Butte Mine, near here. The decision delays permitting.
The tribe, intervening in the license renewal application for the mine in Dawes County, Nebraska, adjacent to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, argued that the staff recommended approval in violation of its rights under the National Historic Preservation Act and National Environmental Protection Act, or NEPA.
Resolving in favor of the tribe's argument, an oversight panel established by the Atomic Licensing and Safety Board ruled: "The NRC staff has not met its identification obligations" under the two laws, "nor has the NRC staff, in its environmental assessment, undertaken a hard look under NEPA at cultural resources within the license area."
The incident occurred on the Fourth of July last year, but only went to trial this month. Itemad "Angel" Almatar said that she was also kicked, and had her hijab taken off by five Chicago police officers at a train station, CBS Chicago reported.
Almatar was charged with reckless conduct and resisting arrest over the incident.
Much of the incident was captured on video and shows that Almatar was no criminal. In spite of the video showing her innocence, Cook County prosecutors forced Almatar to go to trial. On Wednesday, a jury found her not guilty on all charges.
It has been reported earlier that at least 131 people were killed and hundreds more injured following the explosions.
The attack, which claimed the lives of many children and injured hundreds of people, occurred early on Sunday in central Baghdad's majority-Shiite Karrada district, the Al Jazeera news channel reported, citing its own sources.

An Ilyushin Il-76TA Candid aircraft of the Russian Ministry for Civil Defense
"Contact was lost in the Kachug area of the Irkutsk Region, where smoke from forest fires was extremely thick," RIA Novosti reports, citing a source within the emergencies ministry.
A large search operation has been launched to find the missing plane, with nearly 450 people involved in the rescue effort.
"All in all the search-and-rescue operation involves 441 people and 28 units of equipment, including 16 aircraft," an official told RIA Novosti.
According to the local administration, the search is being conducted by planes because the territory is too large and inaccessible for a ground search and there are no roads in the area.
Over 160 others were also injured, AP reported citing hospital and police sources. Interior Ministry spokesman Saad Maan confirmed that the attack was a car bomb.
Eyewitnesses reported on Twitter that many shops burned down in the explosion. Many also fear the number of casualties could grow.
Karrada, the upper middle class district of the Iraqi capital, is mostly inhabited by Shia but also has quite a large Christian minority. The area gets really busy after sunset during the holy month of Ramadan.
In a 2008 essay for his Brooklyn high school newspaper, Bhuiya wrote, "I believe that I have greatness in me. I want to be a superhero," the Washington Post reported. He added kudos to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill who "fought a worldwide battle against the evil supervillain Adolf Hitler."
Soon he was enrolled at Columbia University — and the brand-new Ivy Leaguer seemingly had the world at his feet.
Then something shifted.
Bhuiya, a Muslim, became deeply interested in the Islamic State. His internet activity on that topic came to the FBI's attention in June 2014 — particularly that he might try to travel to Syria — so the Joint Terrorism Task Force in New York paid him a visit, the Post said, citing court documents.
Comment: What role if any did the Task Force have in his decision to go to Syria? For every dupe like Bhuiya who goes to Syria only to have his illusions shattered, there's another (or more) who have a great time amid the filth and gore. That's what Daesh is designed to do: attract the pathological and naive cannon fodder and head choppers, all in the interests of covert U.S. foreign policy. And now, after having realized the depth of his mistake, Bhuiya has the privilege of becoming property of the FBI. Out of the frying pan...
It appeared to be a beautiful day on the remote Tuchodi Lakes in the northwestern British Columbia, so a large moose decided to take a swim. Like a celebrity sun-tanning on vacation, however, the casual dip soon went viral thanks to some pesky paparazzi.
In a video posted last June to the Wolftracker TV YouTube channel that subsequently went viral, the moose is chased by a boat across the otherwise serene waters. A shirtless man standing astride the bow then jumps aboard the hapless Alces alces and proceeds to take a spin on the moose for 15 seconds before falling off like a rodeo rider tossed from a bucking bronc.













Comment: See also: The valiant effort to heal 'unimaginable' levels of trauma among Gaza's children