The Jerusalem Post

Gaza humanitari­an crisis worsens; strikes intensify

- • By NIDAL AL-MUGHRABI and DAN WILLIAMS

Diplomatic efforts to arrange a ceasefire to let aid reach the besieged Gaza Strip failed on Monday, and Israel ordered the evacuation of villages in a strip of territory near its border with Lebanon, raising fears the war could spread to a new front.

Israel has vowed to annihilate the Hamas terror movement that rules Gaza, after its fighters burst across the barrier surroundin­g the enclave on October 7, gunning down 1,300 Israelis, mainly civilians, in the deadliest day in Israel’s 75-year history.

It has put Gaza, home to 2.3 million Palestinia­ns, under a total blockade and pounded it with air strikes, and is widely expected to launch a ground assault. Gaza authoritie­s say at least 2,750 people have been killed there, including mainly civilians.

According to the United Nations, a million Gazans have already been driven from their homes. Power is out, sanitary water is scarce, and the last fuel for emergency generators could be used up within a day.

Residents said overnight air strikes were the heaviest yet, and the bombing carried on through the day.

“We were inside the house when we found bodies scattering, flying in the air – bodies of children who have nothing to do with the war,” said resident Abed Rabayaa, whose neighbor’s house in Khan Yunis, the main city in the southern part of the enclave, was hit overnight.

The 10 days of strikes so far have failed to eliminate Hamas’s capability to fire rockets into Israel, where warning sirens sounded. Hamas said it fired a barrage at Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.

Diplomatic efforts have concentrat­ed on getting aid into Gaza through the Rafah crossing with Egypt, the sole route out that is not controlled by Israel.

Egypt said Israel was not cooperatin­g, leaving hundreds of tons of supplies stuck.

“There is an urgent need to alleviate the suffering of Palestinia­n civilians in Gaza,” Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told reporters, adding talks with Israel on opening Rafah for aid had

so far been fruitless.

Washington has also been focusing on getting the crossing briefly opened to allow some of the few hundred Gazans with US passports to leave. Shoukry said Egypt could allow medical evacuation­s and let in some Gazans with permission to travel.

There has been no public talk, however, of Egypt accepting a mass influx of refugees, meaning the vast majority of Gazans are unlikely to be offered a route out. Egypt and other Arab states say a mass exodus would be unacceptab­le because it would amount to the expulsion of Palestinia­ns

from their land.

Those trying to reach the crossing inside Gaza described the route as perilous and under attack.

“On our way to the crossing they shelled Rafah Street and we started screaming,” said one resident near the crossing, Hadeel Abu Dahoud. “Nowhere is safe in Gaza. Wherever we go there’s shelling, shelling, crying, screaming, blood.”

Israel has said more than a million people in the northern half of the enclave must head to the southern half for their safety. While tens of thousands have complied and fled, the United Nations says there is no way to move so many people without causing a humanitari­an catastroph­e; Hamas has told them to stay put.

With each day of air strikes, Gazans have been clawing at the rubble of flattened buildings with bare hands to rescue neighbors and recover the dead, with virtually no mechanical equipment to clear away the wreckage.

Civil emergency officer Abid Saqir told Reuters at one bomb site that there were at least 1,000 bodies trapped under rubble at locations across the enclave.

Mohammad Abu Saleema, director of the largest hospital in the Gaza Strip, said those seriously wounded must be sent to hospitals outside Gaza or there would be no room for more wounded to be treated.

Cairo says the Rafah crossing is not officially closed but is inoperable due to Israeli strikes on the Gaza side. US officials were still hoping Rafah would operate for a few hours later on Monday, White House spokesman John Kirby said, though earlier hopes had been dashed.

Early on Monday, two Egyptian security sources had told Reuters a temporary ceasefire in southern Gaza had been agreed to last several hours to facilitate aid and evacuation­s at Rafah. However, Egyptian state TV later quoted an unnamed, high-level source as saying that no truce had been agreed. Israel and Hamas both denied reports of a deal to open the crossing.

On the ground at Rafah, one source said the Egyptian side of the crossing was ready. Hundreds of tons of aid from agencies and donor countries were waiting on trucks in the nearby Egyptian town of Al-Arish for clearance to enter.

“We are waiting for the green light for the aid to enter and dozens of volunteers are ready at any time,” a Red Crescent official in northern Sinai said. (Reuters)

 ?? (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90) ?? PALESTINIA­N CIVIL Defense and medical teams search for survivors after an Israeli air strike on the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip yesterday.
(Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90) PALESTINIA­N CIVIL Defense and medical teams search for survivors after an Israeli air strike on the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip yesterday.

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