Albany Times Union

Netanyahu vows to carry out Rafah invasion

- By Wafaa Shurafa and Samy Magdy

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has escalated his pledge to invade the southern Gaza city of Rafah, declaring: “There is a date.”

Netanyahu has repeatedly said Israel must send ground forces into Rafah, saying it is Hamas’ last stronghold in Gaza. But the internatio­nal community, including the U.S., opposes the operation, saying the roughly 1.4 million civilians seeking shelter there will be in danger.

Israel has insisted it has a plan to protect the civilians.

In a video statement Monday, Netanyahu said the Rafah operation is essential for victory.

“It will happen. There is a date,” he said, without elaboratin­g.

He spoke as Israeli negotiator­s were in Cairo discussing internatio­nal efforts to broker a ceasefire deal with Hamas.

Earlier, streams of Palestinia­ns filed into the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis on Monday to salvage what they could from the vast destructio­n left in the wake of Israel’s offensive, a day after the Israeli military announced it was withdrawin­g troops from the area.

Those returning found their hometown, Gaza’s second largest city, unrecogniz­able, with thousands of buildings destroyed or damaged. Men, women and children went down streets bulldozed into stretches of dirt, searching for their homes among fields of rubble and debris that were once blocks of apartments and businesses. On other blocks, buildings still stood but were gutted shells, scorched and full of holes, with partially shattered upper floors dangling off precipitou­sly.

The scenes of the city underscore­d what has been one of world’s most destructiv­e and lethal military assaults in recent decades, which has left vast swaths of the tiny coastal territory unlivable for its 2.3 million people. It also portended what is likely to happen in Gaza’s southernmo­st town of Rafah, where half of Gaza’s uprooted population is now crowded, if Israel goes ahead with plans to invade it.

Magdy Abu Sahrour was stunned, seeing his house in Khan Younis flattened.

“I couldn’t find my home because of all the destructio­n,” he said as he stood in front of the rubble. “Where is my place, where is my home? … It’s a tragic situation.”

Israel sent troops into Khan Younis in December, part of its blistering ground offensive that came in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack and hostage-taking into southern Israel. Its withdrawal brought Israeli troops in the tiny coastal enclave to one of the lowest since the war began.

The war, now in its seventh month, has killed more than 33,000 Palestinia­ns, mostly women and children, according to local health authoritie­s. Israeli authoritie­s say 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed and roughly 250 people taken hostage in Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.

Many of the thousands who filtered into Khan Younis by foot and on donkey cart on Monday have been sheltering in Rafah since they fled their homes. The withdrawal gave them a chance to see the wreckage of their homes and retrieve a few possession­s. But with the city now unlivable, they said they had little immediate chance to return.

An estimated 55% of the buildings in the Khan Younis area — around 45,000 buildings — have been destroyed or damaged, according to the latest figures from two researcher­s in the U.S. who have been using satellite imagery to track destructio­n throughout the war Corey Scher of City University of New York and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University.

Mahmoud Abdel-ghani, who fled to Rafah in December, found his and his neighbors’ houses flattened. “Many areas, especially the city center, have become unfit for life,” he said.

One woman clambered over slabs of collapsed concrete atop a mountain of wreckage that was once her home. Her son crawled on all fours into a hollow under the rubble and twisted rebar, clearing away concrete blocks.

“There are no words to describe the pain inside me,” the woman said, her voice breaking. “Our memories, our dreams, our childhood here, our family we were raised with them here … It’s all gone.” The woman, who identified herself only by her first name, Hanan, put a few items they found into a backpack, including a plastic red flower.

Khan Younis’ main Nasser Hospital was trashed inside, with debris strewn around the wards and ceiling panels collapsed. The exterior appeared largely intact, but the extent of the damage was not immediatel­y clear. Israeli troops stormed the facility during the offensive, saying they believed the remains of hostages were inside, though they did not report finding any.

Israel said Khan Younis was a major Hamas stronghold and that its operations there killed thousands of militants and inflicted heavy damage to a vast network of tunnels used by Hamas to move weapons and fighters. It also claimed to have found evidence that hostages were held in the city.

With the troops’ withdrawal, Hamas could seek to regroup there as it has in northern Gaza, where the military scaled back forces earlier.

Israel says it still intends to invade Rafah, which it says is Hamas’ last major stronghold. That has raised internatio­nal alarm over the fate of the around 1.4 million Palestinia­ns sheltering there, most displaced from other parts of the Gaza Strip.

 ?? Tsafrir Abayov/associated Press ?? Israeli soldiers rest Monday on their tank on the border with the Gaza Strip.
Tsafrir Abayov/associated Press Israeli soldiers rest Monday on their tank on the border with the Gaza Strip.

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