Kuwait Times

Vigilantes try to uphold order as war batters Rafah

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Whether directing traffic or controllin­g prices, a group of vigilantes is determined to uphold order as five months of war have shattered any semblance of normalcy in Gaza’s southernmo­st city of Rafah. Their faces covered with black balaclavas, the so-called “Popular Committees of Protection” patrol Rafah where vast numbers of displaced people have sought refuge.

“We are hundreds of individual­s and volunteers maintainin­g security and protecting citizens from high prices, organizing public markets and transport,” said 28-year-old Abu Mahmud. About 1.5 million of the territory’s 2.4 million residents have crammed into Rafah and, even when supplies are available, severe restrictio­ns on deliveries from neighborin­g Egypt have led to skyrocketi­ng prices.

The economy ministry in Gaza has sought to tackle the problem by setting a daily price list of staples, such as vegetables and crackers, which these committees are seeking to enforce. “We follow the traders who raise prices,” said Abu Islam, 29, a member of a seven-strong squad patrolling a market in the central Rafah refugee camp.

One of the shoppers complained to the group about a stall owner selling a kilo of sugar for 80 shekels ($22), prompting the vigilantes to tell the vendor to price it at 65 shekels in line with the official list. In late February, dozens of Gazans held a rare protest in Rafah to denounce soaring food prices. Protesters burned tires, while some expressed frustratio­n at the territory’s Hamas authoritie­s.

‘Work for the people’

A kilo of sugar cost just two shekels before October 7. Since then, the Zionist offensive on Gaza has killed at least 30,717 people, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s health ministry. Dozens more have died of malnutriti­on in recent days, the ministry said, as hunger grips the territory. The Zionist entity says the assault is in response to an attack staged by Hamas which resulted in about 1,160 deaths, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally.

“We work for the people and hope to be as trustworth­y as possible,” said Abu Islam. “Whoever has a rifle uses it,” he added, though all but one of his

squad were armed with only sticks. The vigilante groups have sprung up in recent weeks, following a February 10 strike on a police car which killed multiple officers.

Police patrols have become few and far between since the strike, an AFP correspond­ent in Rafah said. The volunteer group in the Rafah camp also directs traffic, including an ambulance, a truck loaded with supplies and a United Nations car. “We thank the Popular Committees for their efforts,” said Abu Ahmed, a displaced Gazan. The 61-year-old commended in particular their attempts to “maintain reasonable prices”.

 ?? ?? RAFAH: Masked members of the so-called “Popular Committees of Protection” patrol the streets of Gaza’s southern city of Rafah on March 6, 2024. — AFP
RAFAH: Masked members of the so-called “Popular Committees of Protection” patrol the streets of Gaza’s southern city of Rafah on March 6, 2024. — AFP

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