The Philippine Star

Deadly strikes hit Rafah ahead of Gaza truce push

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PALESTINIA­N TERRITORIE­S (AFP) – Deadly strikes were reported early yesterday in the overcrowde­d Gaza border town of Rafah as internatio­nal mediators readied a new push to seal a tentative truce deal between Israel and Hamas.

Hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinia­ns have fled south to Rafah since the outbreak of the war, with the former city of 200,000 now housing more than half of Gaza’s two millionplu­s population, a WHO representa­tive said on Friday.

The United Nations’ humanitari­an agency OCHA said it was deeply concerned about the escalation of hostilitie­s in nearby Khan Yunis, which have pushed more and more people south in recent days.

“Most are living in makeshift structures, tents or out in the open,” OCHA spokesman Jens Laerke said during a briefing in Geneva.

“Rafah is a pressure cooker of despair, and we fear for what comes next.”

An AFP journalist in the city heard powerful explosions shortly after midnight yesterday, with the Hamasrun health ministry later reporting 14 people killed in two strikes there.

The ministry said more than 100 people in total were killed across the territory overnight.

Abdulkarim Misbah, one of the many people seeking refuge in Rafah, said he had first left his home in the northern Jabalia refugee camp for Khan Yunis, only to be uprooted again.

“We escaped last week from death in Khan Yunis, without bringing anything with us. We didn’t find a place to stay. We slept on the streets the first two nights. The women and children slept in a mosque,” the 32-year-old father said.

The family later received a donated tent, setting it up right beside the Egyptian border.

“My four children are shivering from the cold. They feel sick and unwell all the time,” he said.

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