Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

A week into war, Gazans flee homes as Israeli offensive looms

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GAZA STRIP, Palestinia­n Territorie­s, Oct 14, 2023 (AFP) - Israel warned Palestinia­ns on Saturday to get out of the northern Gaza Strip before an expected large-scale ground offensive against Hamas, one week on from the deadliest attack in Israeli history.

Troops, tanks and heavy weaponry were massed at the border in anticipati­on of strikes against leaders of the Islamist group. On the Gazan side, health officials said more than 2,200 people had been killed -- most of them civilians, as on the Israeli side -- as concerns grew about the humanitari­an situation in the besieged enclave as food, fuel supplies and medicines ran low.

Saudi Arabia called for an "immediate ceasefire", while the United States called on China to use its regional influence to broker urgent peace talks.

The Israeli military has been pounding the besieged territory with thousands of missiles since last Saturday's deadly dawn raid, which has been likened to the 9/11 attacks in the United States. One air strike killed Ali Qadi, described as "a company commander of the Hamas 'Nukhba' commando force" involved in the unpreceden­ted attack, the army said.

"Localised" raids have also taken place, as Israeli troops encircle the Gaza Strip, said army spokesman Jonathan Conricus.

Some 1.1 million people -- nearly half the population of 2.4 million -- live in the north of Gaza, and aid agencies have said forcing them to move is an impossibil­ity as the war rages.

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh accused Israel on Saturday of committing "war crimes" in Gaza and blocking the supply of humanitari­an aid. In a letter to United Nations SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres, posted on the militant group's website, he called Israel's cutting off of electricit­y, water and fuel supplies "barbaric".

Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas, which several Western government­s, including the United States, have proscribed as a terrorist organisati­on.

AFP reporters on the outskirts of the southern Israeli city of Sderot saw troops hit northern Gaza with fresh air strikes on Saturday -- the Jewish Sabbath -- sending huge plumes of dense black smoke into the sky.

Gazans, who cannot leave the enclave as it is blockaded by both Israel and Egypt, have packed what belongings they can into bags and suitcases, to trudge through the rubblestre­wn streets. A stream of cars, trucks, three-wheeled vehicles and donkey-drawn carts joined the frantic mass movement south, all loaded with families and their belongings, mattresses, bedding and bags strapped onto the roofs of packed vehicles. Roads in the 40-kilometre long territory were jammed. But putting distance between people and the bombings had not dispelled fear.

"We wake up to the killing and death under the bombs," said Mohamed Abu Ali, who lives in Gaza. "We don't know

where to go, where is safe. We have no food, water or electricit­y," he added.

Aid agencies, including the UN and Red Cross, plus several foreign diplomats have voiced concern about the feasibilit­y of the evacuation plan.

Arab League chief Ahmed Abul Gheit said Israel's order was a "forced transfer" that constitute­s "a crime".

According to the UN, more than 1,300 buildings in Gaza have been destroyed, while local hospitals have become overwhelme­d with growing numbers of dead and injured. "What does the world want from us?" asked one Palestinia­n resident, Mohamed Khaled, 43. "I am a refugee in Gaza and they want to displace me yet again?"

The Hamas attack and the war it sparked -- Gaza's fifth in 15 years -have upended Middle Eastern politics, prompting fears that the violence will spread across the volatile region.

Palestinia­n prime minister Mohammad Shtayyeh accused Israel of "genocide" in Gaza, while clashes in the occupied West Bank have killed 53 Palestinia­ns in the past week.

Angry protests condemning Israel and supporting the Palestinia­ns in Gaza took place across the Arab world on Friday.

More took place in New York on Friday night, and London on Saturday, where protesters waved Palestinia­n flags and placards with slogans such as "Freedom for Palestine" and "End the massacre".

 ?? ?? A Palestinia­n shouts following an Israeli strike, in the southern Gaza Strip, as fighting between Israel and the Hamas movement continues for the eighth consecutiv­e day. (Photo by YASSER QUDIH / AFP)
A Palestinia­n shouts following an Israeli strike, in the southern Gaza Strip, as fighting between Israel and the Hamas movement continues for the eighth consecutiv­e day. (Photo by YASSER QUDIH / AFP)

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