Marin Independent Journal

Fleeing Palestinia­ns stream into southern Gaza town

- By Najib Jobain, Samy Magdy and Jack Jeffery

Tens of thousands of Palestinia­ns streamed into an already crowded town at the southernmo­st end of Gaza in recent days, fleeing Israel's bombardmen­t of the center of the strip, as a senior U.N. official on Friday criticized Israel for continuing to impose “severe restrictio­ns” on access to aid.

The renewed criticism came a week after the U.N. Security Council demanded an immediate increase in humanitari­an deliveries to the besieged territory.

Israel's unpreceden­ted air and ground offensive against Hamas has displaced some 85% of the Gaza Strip's 2.3 million residents, sending swells of people seeking shelter in Israeli-designated safe areas that the military has neverthele­ss also bombed. That has left Palestinia­ns with a harrowing sense that nowhere is safe in the tiny enclave.

Nearly the entire population is fully dependent on outside humanitari­an aid, said Philippe Lazzarini, head of UNRWA, the U.N. agency for Palestinia­n refugees. A quarter of the population is starving because too few trucks enter with food, medicine, fuel and other supplies — sometimes fewer than 100 trucks a day, according to U.N. daily reports.

Drone footage taken Friday showed a vast camp of thousands of tents and makeshift shacks set up on what had been empty land on Rafah's western outskirts next to U.N. warehouses. People arrived in Rafah in trucks, in carts and on foot. Those who did not find space in the already overwhelme­d shelters put up tents on roadsides slick with mud from winter rains.

With the new arrivals, the town and its surroundin­g area are now packed with some 850,000 people, more than triple the normal population, according to U.N. figures.

“Some are sleeping in their cars, and others are sleeping in the open,” said Juliette Touma, UNRWA's director of communicat­ions.

In other developmen­ts, South Africa launched a case at the United Nations' top court accusing Israel of genocide against Palestinia­ns in Gaza and asking the court to order Israel to halt its attacks. It was the first such challenge made at the court over the current war. Israel swiftly rejected the filing “with disgust.”

The two nations have a poor relationsh­ip. Many South Africans, including President Cyril Ramaphosa, have compared Israel's policies toward Palestinia­ns with South Africa's past apartheid regime of racial segregatio­n.

Israel's widening Gaza campaign, which has already flattened much of the north, is now focused on the urban refugee camps of Bureij,

Nuseirat and Maghazi in central Gaza, where Israeli warplanes and artillery have leveled buildings.

But fighting has not abated in the north, and the city of Khan Younis in the south, where Israel believes Hamas' leaders are hiding, is also a smoldering battlegrou­nd. Fighters have continued to fire rockets, mostly at Israel's south.

The war has already killed over 21,500 Palestinia­ns, most of them women and children, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-ruled territory. Its count does not distinguis­h between civilians and combatants.

Israeli officials have brushed off internatio­nal calls for a cease-fire, saying it would amount to a victory for Hamas, which the military has promised to dismantle. It has also vowed to bring back more than 100 hostages still held by the fighters after their Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel that triggered the war. The assault killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians.

The military says 168 of its soldiers have been killed since the ground offensive began.

The U.N. said late Thursday that around 100,000 people have arrived in Rafah, along the border with Egypt, in recent days. The town and its surroundin­g region had a prewar population of around 280,000, and the area was already hosting more than 470,000 people driven from their homes by the war.

The new arrivals enter a landscape of misery. Most available water is polluted. The sanitation system has broken down, and working toilets are a rarity. Illnesses run rampant among multiple extended families all squeezed together in shelters, homes or on the street — rashes, respirator­y problems, diarrhea and other intestinal diseases.

“Everyone here is infected with a disease,” Dalia Abu Samhadana said of her family, who fled the fighting in Khan Younis earlier in the month and now shelter in Rafah's Shaboura district in a house with 49 people. With little food available, her daily diet is mainly bread and tea.

Israel has told residents of central Gaza to head south, but even as the displaced have poured in, Rafah has not been spared.

A strike Thursday evening destroyed a residentia­l building, killing at least 23 people, according to the media office of the nearby Al-Kuwaiti Hospital.

At the hospital, residents rushed in a baby whose face was flecked with dust and who wailed as doctors tore open a Mickey Mouse onesie to check for injuries.

Shorouq Abu Oun had been sheltering at her sister's house, near the strike. She said her family had fled here from the north after the Israeli military said it was safe. “I wish we were martyred there and didn't come here,” she said, speaking at the hospital where the dead and wounded were taken.

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