Stabroek News

Gazans fear Israeli attack on their last refuge; US launches retaliator­y strikes

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GAZA, (Reuters) - Israeli forces shelled the outskirts of Rafah yesterday, the last refuge on the southern edge of the Gaza Strip where hundreds of thousands displaced people, penned against the border fence, feared a new assault with nowhere left to flee.

The United States also began retaliator­y strikes in Iraq and Syria, the U.S. military said, after a drone attack in Jordan this week killed three U.S. troops, developmen­ts likely to increase concern about spiralling tensions in the Middle East.

The U.S. strikes targeted Iranbacked militants that Washington has blamed for the drone attack, the first deadly strike against U.S. forces since the Israel-Gaza war erupted in October.

More than half of Gaza’s 2.3 million residents are now homeless and crammed into Rafah on the Egyptian border. Tens of thousands have arrived in recent days, carrying belongings in their arms and pulling children on carts, since Israeli forces last week launched one of the biggest assaults of the war to capture adjacent Khan Younis, the main southern city.

If the Israeli tanks keep coming, “we will be left with two choices: stay and die or climb the walls into Egypt,” said Emad, 55, a businessma­n and father of six, reached on a mobile phone chat app.

“Most of Gaza’s population are in Rafah. If the tanks storm in, it will be a massacre like never before during this war.”

Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said on Thursday that troops would now “eliminate terror elements” in Rafah, one of the few areas not yet taken in an almost four-month-old assault.

As the only part of Gaza with access to the limited food and medical aid trickling across the border, Rafah and nearby parts of Khan Younis have become a warren of makeshift tents, clogged by winter mud. Wind and cold add to the misery, blowing tents down or flooding them and the ground in-between.

“What should we do? We live in multiple miseries, a war, starvation, and now the rain,” said Um Badri, a mother of five from

Gaza City, now in a tent in Khan Younis.

“We used to wait for winter, to enjoy watching the rain from the balcony of our house. Now, our house is gone, and the rainwater has flooded the tent we have ended up in.”

With phone service mostly absent across Gaza, residents climbed a sandy berm at the border fence and crouched beside the razor wire hoping for an Egyptian mobile signal. Mariam Odeh was trying to get a message to family still in Khan Younis, “to tell them we are still alive and not martyrs like the others”.

The United Nations says rescuers can no longer reach the sick and wounded on the battlefiel­d in Khan Younis, and the prospect of combat reaching Rafah is almost unthinkabl­e.

“Rafah is a pressure cooker of despair, and we fear for what comes next,” Jens Laerke of the U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs told a briefing in Geneva.

The Gaza war was triggered by fighters from the Hamas militant group that runs Gaza who stormed across the border fence into Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and capturing 253 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then, Gaza health authoritie­s say more than 27,000 Palestinia­ns have been confirmed killed, 112 of them in the past 24 hours, with thousands more bodies feared lost amid the ruins.

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