Hamas in Gaza
Hamas in GazaAbed Rahim Khatib/Flash90

Nejwa Ali, 36, an employee of the US Department of Homeland Security, was suspended from her post after she published posts that supported Hamas and the massacre near the Gaza border.

The suspension came after an investigation by the Daily Wire revealed that Ali had posted anti-Zionist, anti-Semitic and pro-Hamas posts.

Shortly after the surprise attack, Ali published a photo of a terrorist parachuting into Israel and wrote that every Israeli and every Jew who supports Israel should be harmed. In addition, she shared anti-Semitic photos showing Jews with long noses, a well-known anti-Semitic symbol.

She wrote that, "The American and Israeli privilege is disgusting - the government and the army are solely responsible for the attack. I hold every Israeli responsible for the actions taken by their government if they have not condemned them."

Ali started her job in 2019 and was recently promoted. In the past, she also worked in the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and UNRWA.

Earlier, the director of the ABC network, David Anderson, confirmed during a meeting with the Australian Communications Legislation Commission that the American media network opened an investigation against one of its senior journalists, Tom Joyner. The report said that the investigation followed a text message sent to hundreds of journalists around the world in which he claimed that the reports that dozens of Israeli babies were murdered and their heads cut off during the murderous attack by Hamas are "bullshit," as he defined it.

"I know Mr. Joyner is quite remorseful and apologetic for the words he used. He tried at the time to do what journalists do, he tried to verify what sources could back up the claims that were made at the time. Mr. Joyner has a right to comment here, as we look at the case. I'm sorry it happened," Anderson told committee members.

He said that the ABC network contacted the IDF to confirm the shocking report about 40 Israeli babies whose heads were beheaded by Hamas terrorists, but according to him the Israeli army could not verify the report at the time.

In response to a question by Senator Holly Hughes from New South Wales whether ABC's coverage of the war in Israel is biased by anti-Semitic motives against Israel, Anderson denied that the network is anti-Semitic biased against Israel.

"I don't think ABC is anti-Semitic in any way. We report impartially what information we have at the time," Anderson said.