The Sun (Lowell)

Anne E. Brown

Of Lowell; age 75

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LOWELL - Anne E. (Lacasse) Brown, 75, of Lowell passed away peacefully on the morning of November 17th, 2023 surrounded by her family. She was born on January 30,1948 in Claremont, N.H. to the late Rene and Rolande Lacasse.

Anne was the oldest of six children and grew up in Claremont. She graduated from St. Mary’s High School and got her nursing degree from the

St. Joseph’s Hospital Nursing School in Lowell, Ma. She was NICU nurse until the day she

retired.

She met and married Leo R Brown Jr. while in nursing school and lived in Lowell for over 50 years where she was actively involved with St Michael’s school and Parrish.

She is survived by her children: Karyn Carey and her husband Scott of Boxford, MA, Kate Pierre-pierre and her husband Fritz of Gloucester, MA and Ken Brown and his wife Jill of Braintree, MA. She was blessed with seven grandchild­ren: Mckenzie and Will Carey, Julia, Aidan and Dylan Brown and Jacoby Pierre-pierre and Niya.

Relatives and Friends are invited to attend Anne’s visitation at St. Michael Church,

12 6th St. in Lowell on Monday, Nov. 27th from 10:00am until 10:45am followed by her Funeral Mass to be celebrated at 11:00am at the church. Burial will be private. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Anne’s memory to: Project Sweet Peas, 45 Boylston St., Warwick, RI 02889 or at https:// www.projectswe­etpeas.com/make-a-gift. html. Arrangemen­ts have been entrusted to the care of the MCKENNA-OUELLETTE FUNERAL HOME, 327 Hildreth Street in

Lowell. For condolence­s, please visit www. mckennaoue­llette.com.

A four-day cease-fire in Gaza between Israel and Hamas will begin Friday morning, Qatar said, a day later than originally announced, as negotiator­s worked out final details of the deal, which is to lead to the release of dozens of hostages held by militants and Palestinia­ns imprisoned by Israel.

The diplomatic breakthrou­gh promised some relief for the 2.3 million Palestinia­ns in Gaza who have endured weeks of Israeli bombardmen­t, as well as families in Israel fearful for the fate of their loved ones taken captive during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack that triggered the war.

The cease-fire was originally set to begin Thursday morning, but it appeared to hit a snag the night before when Israel’s national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, announced a oneday delay without providing a reason.

On Thursday, Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed al-ansari announced the cease-fire will start at 7 a.m. local time Friday (5 a.m. GMT.)

He said the two sides had exchanged lists of those to be released, and the first group of 13 women and children held by Hamas would be freed Friday afternoon. He did not say how many Palestinia­n prisoners would be freed, but officials have said three would be freed for every hostage.

Increased aid for Palestinia­ns will start to enter Gaza “as soon as possible,” al-ansari said. The hope is that the “momentum” from this deal will lead to an “end to this violence,” he told reporters.

RISING TOLL IN GAZA

The Health Ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza, meanwhile, resumed its detailed count of Palestinia­n casualties from the war, saying over 13,300 have been killed. The new numbers were not fully broken down, but women and minors have consistent­ly made up around two-thirds of the dead in past tallies.

The figures do not include updated numbers from hospitals in the north, where services and communicat­ion largely broke down earlier this month. The ministry says some 6,000 people have been reported missing, feared buried under rubble.

The ministry does not differenti­ate between civilians and militants in its death tolls. Israel says it has killed thousands of Hamas fighters, without presenting evidence for its count.

The ministry had stopped publishing casualty counts as of Nov. 11, saying it had lost the ability to do so because of the collapse of the health sector in the north.

NETANYAHU SAYS TRUCE WON’T END WAR

The truce agreement raised hopes of eventually winding down the war, which has leveled vast swaths of Gaza, fueled a surge of violence in the occupied West Bank and stirred fears of a wider conflagrat­ion across the Middle East.

Air-raid sirens sounded across northern Israel on Thursday as Hezbollah said it fired 48 Katyusha rockets from southern Lebanon. The barrage came after an Israeli strike killed five Hezbollah fighters, including the son of the head of the group’s parliament­ary bloc.

The Israeli military said it was striking the sources of the launches. Israel and Hezbollah, which fought a monthlong war in 2006, have repeatedly traded fire across the border since the war in Gaza broke out.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to continue the war after the truce expires to destroy Hamas’ military capabiliti­es, end its 16-year rule in Gaza and return all the estimated 240 captives held in Gaza by Hamas and other groups.

“We will continue it until we achieve all our goals,” Netanyahu said, adding that he had delivered the same message in a phone call to U.S. President Joe Biden. Washington has provided extensive military and diplomatic support to Israel since the start of the war.

The delay in implementi­ng the cease-fire dismayed uprooted Palestinia­ns in Gaza, who hope to use the few days of quiet to visit homes they had fled — or at least the wreckage of them — and reconnect with families. More than 1.7 million people, three-fourths of Gaza’s population, have been displaced in the war.

“We’d been waiting and hoping since yesterday,” said Aya Hamad, who is sheltering at a hospital in the central city of Deir al Balah. “We wanted to go home to get a change of clothes for our children, even though we know our homes have been bombed … It’s all for nothing.”

Israeli troops hold much of northern Gaza and say they have dismantled tunnels and much of Hamas’ infrastruc­ture there. Israeli forces Wednesday revealed what they said was a major Hamas hideout in a tunnel beneath Gaza City’s Shifa Hospital.

The territory’s largest medical center has been at the heart of a fierce battle of narratives over both sides’ allegedly reckless endangerme­nt of civilians. Hamas and hospital staff deny Israeli allegation­s that Shifa was used as a militant command center.

The military said Thursday it detained Shifa’s director, Mohammed Abu Selmia, for questionin­g over his involvemen­t in what it called “extensive” Hamas activities in the hospital. Gaza’s Health Ministry called on internatio­nal bodies to intervene and said it would no longer cooperate with the World Health Organizati­on in evacuating hospitals.

Earlier Thursday, Israel ordered the full evacuation of the Indonesian Hospital in the north, Dr. Munir alboursh, a Health Ministry official inside the facility, told Al Jazeera.

Fighting has raged outside the hospital for days, and hundreds of people have already been evacuated to the south. It was unclear if the arrest of Abu Selmia would affect those efforts.

Israeli military spokesman Col. Richard Hecht said combat operations would continue “until we are given the order to hold our fire.”

Israeli troops have surrounded the Jabaliya refugee camp and called on any residents inside to evacuate during a threehour window Thursday, he said. The military has said it is pursuing Hamas fighters in Jabaliya, a dense urban district adjacent to Gaza City that has come under intense bombardmen­t for weeks.

Israel has threatened to extend its invasion to southern Gaza, where most of the territory’s population is now located. More than 1 million people, including hundreds of thousands who fled the north, have crammed into overflowin­g U.n.-run shelters with dwindling food, water and basic supplies.

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