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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 169
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 12:01 UTC
  • UTC12:01
  • EDT08:01
  • GMT13:01
  • CET14:01
  • JST21:01
  • HKT20:01
← The MonexusObituaries

Sam Abu Haikel, 7 months: reported in Iranian state media, not yet verified by wire

A seven-month-old Palestinian baby, Sam Abu Haikel, has been reported killed in a Tasnim dispatch quoting the infant's father. The death has not yet been corroborated by a wire service, UN agency, or Israeli military briefing in the morning window.

A seven-month-old Palestinian baby, Sam Abu Haikel, has been reported killed in a Tasnim dispatch quoting the infant's father. @presstv · Telegram

A seven-month-old Palestinian baby, identified in Iranian state media as Sam Abu Haikel, has been reported killed in circumstances the infant's father, Fahd Abu Haikl, described in an account carried by Tasnim on 7 June 2026. "The bullet passed through the glass and tore my baby's heart," the father is quoted as saying in a Tasnim news post at 05:07 UTC. Two posts on Tasnim's English and Persian Telegram channels — a news brief and a separate dispatch describing a cartoon by the Yemeni artist Kamal Sharaf titled "Child Hunter" — constitute the entirety of the public reporting on the death available to this publication in its morning review.

The death of any child in a conflict zone is a first-order human fact. Reporting it carries an obligation to honour the life, to describe the circumstances accurately, and to be explicit about what has been independently verified and what has not. The published sourcing on this case is narrow: an Iranian state-run news agency quoting a parent, and an Iranian state-run news agency carrying a Yemeni cartoonist's response. Monexus is publishing this obituary on the strength of the father's stated account while flagging, in the same article, that the circumstances have not yet been corroborated by a wire service, a UN agency, or an Israeli military spokesperson.

The reported account

According to the Tasnim post at 05:07 UTC, the father told the outlet that the projectile entered through a pane of glass and struck the infant. The Tasnim English post at 05:19 UTC identifies the baby as Sam Abu Haikel, a seven-month-old, and frames the death in the context of a new work by the Yemeni cartoonist Kamal Sharaf titled "Child Hunter." The two transliterations of the family name — Abu Haikel in the English post, Abu Heikl in the Persian-language post — are the variation that commonly arises when a single Arabic name passes through multiple editorial hands.

The father's quoted line is the only direct, named attribution in the available reporting. This publication has been unable, in the morning window, to locate a second outlet carrying the account, an Israeli military statement on the incident, or footage that would allow independent verification of the circumstances. The location of the incident is not specified in the Tasnim posts beyond the Palestinian context.

Sourcing and what it does not yet establish

Iranian state media outlets — Tasnim, IRNA, PressTV — operate under the editorial direction of the Islamic Republic. Their reporting on Palestinian casualties is frequently the first English-language text to circulate on a given incident, and is often picked up, with or without attribution, by sympathetic outlets across the region. Their reporting is not, by the standards applied here, a stand-alone basis for asserting the specific cause, location, or actor in a death. It is, however, a basis for reporting what a named parent says in a named outlet, provided the caveat travels with the quotation.

What the available sourcing does establish:

  • That Tasnim, on 7 June 2026, published two posts naming the child and the father and carrying a direct quotation from the father.
  • That Kamal Sharaf, identified as a Yemeni cartoonist, has a published work titled "Child Hunter" responding to the death.

What the available sourcing does not yet establish:

  • The precise location of the incident.
  • The specific military or paramilitary actor alleged to have fired the projectile.
  • Confirmation from an independent wire service, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the International Committee of the Red Cross, or any hospital or morgue.
  • An Israeli military briefing on the incident.

The structural backdrop

Even when a single death cannot be independently verified within hours of its reporting, the cumulative record of Palestinian child fatalities in the conflict is itself a documented fact. UN OCHA, Save the Children, Defence for Children International, and the major wire services have published, at intervals since late 2023, casualty breakdowns that consistently record children as a substantial share of the dead in Gaza. Reporting on any individual child death in that context sits inside a structural pattern that UN agencies, the ICRC, and Western wire services have established through repeated documentation.

It is, for that reason, a mistake — on either side of the framing — to treat each individual case as either proof of a campaign or an isolated tragedy. Each is a person. The structural pattern is the one a serious reader carries alongside the names. The corollary, which the same agencies and wires have documented in the same period, is Israeli civilian harm from rocket and other attacks — also a first-order fact. The available reporting on this case concerns a Palestinian child, and the verification question is about that specific death, not the broader pattern.

What changes when verification arrives

The obituary will be updated, in the body and on the wire, the moment independent corroboration of the facts arrives from a wire service or a UN agency. If the Israeli military issues a statement, it will be carried, with attribution, in the same article. If the location, the time, or the projectile type is established or revised, the new information will replace the Tasnim-restricted version. If the account is contradicted by independent reporting, that too will be published. Until then, the report stands as the father described it in the outlet that carried his words first, and as a Yemeni cartoonist rendered it in his response. Both are partial records. Both are worth carrying. Neither is the whole story.

Desk note: Monexus has not located independent corroboration of the death in the morning wire. The obituary is published on the strength of the father's quoted account in Tasnim, with the verification gap made explicit. Updates will be appended as wire reporting arrives.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/tasnimnews_en/
  • https://t.me/JahanTasnim/
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire