The Boston Globe

Gazans stay put, fearing attacks in south

Caught between Israeli warnings, relocation perils

- By Samy Magdy and Wafaa Shurafa

DEIR AL BALAH, Gaza Strip — Mahmoud Shalabi did not evacuate his home in northern Gaza despite the frightful Israeli warnings of a looming, far more brutal assault to come as it presses ahead with its war against the Hamas militant group.

The Palestinia­n aid worker is among hundreds of thousands who have remained. Others who initially heeded the Israeli warnings to head south have returned to the territory’s north, where Israel says it considers all those who stay possible “accomplice­s” of Hamas.

Shalabi said leaving his home in Beit Lahia didn’t make sense considerin­g the relentless bombardmen­t of southern Gaza, where Israel has repeatedly urged the more than 1 million northern residents like him to seek refuge. The overcrowde­d shelters and shortages of water and food in the south played a part in their decisions, said Shalabi and others who remained.

Risk death at home, or elsewhere in Gaza, they said.

Leaving would be reasonable only if Israel stopped targeting the south, said Shalabi, who works for Medical Aid for Palestinia­ns, a UK-based charity. “It doesn’t make sense to me that I should leave my home to go and get killed in a tent in the south of Gaza,” he said.

The risks for those staying are likely to rise exponentia­lly once Israel begins its ground offensive, after two-and-a-half weeks of heavy bombardmen­ts have already claimed more than 6,500 lives in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

On Thursday, Israel’s military said it had sent tanks into the north Wednesday night in a limited and brief ground raid, part of its preparatio­ns for the invasion.

With tens of thousands of troops massed along Israel’s border with Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined on Wednesday to say when a full-scale invasion would begin.

Israeli military officials have said they are determined to crush Hamas in response to its brutal Oct. 7 attack on Israeli border communitie­s, and the focus will be on the north, including Gaza City, which Israel says has key Hamas assets, tunnels, and bunkers.

Some 350,000 Palestinia­ns are still in northern Gaza, according to Israeli estimates. Military officials have repeatedly exhorted Palestinia­ns to move south, but have not said whether the presence of a large number of civilians would be a factor in deciding whether to send in tanks and ground troops.

Israel said it seeks to strike Hamas and doesn’t target civilians, but Gaza health officials say many of those killed have been women and children. Those numbers are expected to climb with a ground offensive, which would likely see fierce fighting inside crowded urban areas.

Internatio­nal rights groups have sharply criticized the Israeli evacuation orders, saying they cannot be considered an effective warning to civilians under the rules of internatio­nal law, because of a lack of realistic options for those fleeing.

“When the evacuation routes are bombed, when people north as well as south are caught up in hostilitie­s, when the essentials for survival are lacking, and when there are no assurances for return, people are left with nothing but impossible choices,” said Lynn Hastings, the UN humanitari­an coordinato­r for the Palestinia­n territorie­s. “Nowhere is safe in Gaza.”

Those staying in the north are bracing for worse to come. They live among the ruins of once bustling neighborho­ods while facing dire shortages of fuel, food, and water amid looming hospital shutdowns.

Services in the north have deteriorat­ed since Israel’s evacuation order prompted at least 700,000 Palestinia­ns to flee south. Most homes have no electricit­y, water, or fuel.

More than 1.4 million Gaza residents are now displaced across the narrow strip, out of a population of 2.3 million, and UN shelters are packed at triple their capacity, U.N. agencies say.

In the north, entire neighborho­ods have been reduced to rubble. The destructio­n is so vast that parts of Gaza look like a wasteland.

“Everywhere there is debris, there are destroyed cars, there are destroyed houses. And it’s really difficult to get from one location to the other because there is no fuel,” Shalabi said.

He said he walked for two hours to find a bakery still selling bread to feed his family of 10. Shop shelves are empty; residents are living on canned beans, pineapple, corn.

Still, many Palestinia­ns are choosing to return north, tired of moving from place to place under Israeli fire as shelters become unlivable. UN monitors estimate 30,000 have returned.

 ?? AHMAD HASABALLAH/GETTY IMAGES ?? Palestinia­ns injured in Israeli air raids arrived at Nasser Medical Hospital in Khan Yunis, Gaza.
AHMAD HASABALLAH/GETTY IMAGES Palestinia­ns injured in Israeli air raids arrived at Nasser Medical Hospital in Khan Yunis, Gaza.

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