Palestinians flee northern Gaza as Israel masses troops for assault
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[October 14, 2023]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Ari Rabinovitch
GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Thousands of Palestinians fled the north of
the Gaza Strip on Saturday from the path of an expected Israeli ground
assault, while Israel pounded the area with more air strikes and said it
would keep two roads open to let people escape.
Israel has vowed to annihilate the Hamas militant group that controls
Gaza in retaliation for a rampage by fighters, who stormed through
Israeli towns a week ago, gunning down civilians and making off with
scores of hostages. Some 1,300 were killed in the worst attack on
civilians in Israel's history.
Israeli forces have since put the Hamas-run Gaza Strip, home to 2.3
million Palestinians, under a total siege and bombarded it with
unprecedented air strikes. Gaza authorities say more than 2,200 people
have been killed, a quarter of them children, and nearly 10,000 wounded.
Israel had given the entire population of the northern half of the Gaza
Strip, which includes the enclave's biggest settlement Gaza City, until
Saturday morning to move south. It announced overnight that it would
guarantee the safety of Palestinians fleeing the area on two main roads
until 4:00 pm. (1300 GMT).
"Around the Gaza Strip, Israeli reserve soldiers in formation (are)
getting ready for the next stage of operations," Israeli military
spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Conricus told a video briefing
early on Saturday.
"They are all around the Gaza Strip, in the south, in the centre and in
the north, and they are preparing themselves for whatever target they
get, whatever task."
Hamas has told people not to leave and says the two roads Israel has
declared open are unsafe. It says dozens of people have been killed on
them in strikes on cars and trucks carrying refugees Friday, which
Reuters could not independently verify. Israel says Hamas is preventing
people from leaving to use them as human shields, which Hamas denies.
In Gaza City's Tel Al-Hawa neighborhood, part of the area Israel has
ordered evacuated, warplanes bombed a residential area during the night,
hitting several houses, according to residents who posted appeals on
social media platforms.
Hundreds of residents of the area took refuge at the nearby Quds
hospital and planned to join those fleeing to the south in the morning.
"We lived a night of horror. Israel punished us for not wanting to leave
our home. Is there brutality worse than this?", a father of three told
Reuters by telephone from the hospital, declining to give his name for
fear of reprisals.
"I was never going to leave, I prefer to die and not leave, but I can’t
see my wife children die before my eyes. We are helpless."
In Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, Israeli planes struck a
four-storey building, killing and wounding several people. Neighbors
rushed to rescue people trapped in rubble.
"This is a genocide, not a war, it's genocide. And it's an attempt to
displace the people of the Gaza Strip, but this will not happen," said
neighbor Mohammad Sadeq. "Martyrs are stuck under the rubble and until
now neither us nor the medics nor civil defense were able to take them
out."
'RELEASE OF THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN'
The attacks on Israel plunged the nation into deep mourning and
galvanized the country, which mobilized hundreds of thousands of
reservists within days.
Families of the Israeli hostages kidnapped by Hamas are terrified for
their safety. Avichai Brodetz, a farmer from Kibbutz Kfar Aza whose wife
and three children were taken captive to Gaza, set up a camp outside the
Israeli army headquarters to focus attention on their plight.
"The first thing that needs to happen is the release of the women and
children," he told reporters. "I don't want to be political, I don't
want to stand here with you. I love my friends and my home and my
kibbutz. I hope we can return there and you'll never see me again."
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Palestinians flee their houses amid Israeli strikes after Israel's
call for more than 1 million civilians in northern Gaza to move
south, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, October 14, 2023.
REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
Israel's attacks on Gaza have not halted Hamas missile strikes deep
into Israeli cities. Air raid sirens wailed in central Israel on
Saturday morning and rockets smashed into a greenhouse in Ashkelon
and wounded four people at a kibbutz.
The only route out of Gaza that is not under Israeli control is a
checkpoint with Egypt at Rafah. Egypt officially says its side is
open, but traffic has been halted for days because of Israeli
strikes on the Palestinian side.
Egyptian security sources said the Egyptian side is being reinforced
and Cairo has no intention of accepting a mass influx of Palestinian
refugees.
A senior U.S. State Department official said the United States was
working with Egyptian, Israeli and Qatari officials to open the
crossing later on Saturday to let some people out. Washington had
been in touch with some Palestinian-Americans in Gaza who wanted to
leave, the official said, adding it was not clear whether Hamas
would let anyone reach the crossing.
Countries and aid agencies have sent supplies to Egypt but have so
far been unable to bring them into Gaza. Israel says nothing can
enter through Rafah without its coordination.
The Gaza Strip is already one of the most crowded areas in the
world, and Israel's evacuation order for the northern half meant
those fleeing south were forced to shelter with relatives and
friends, in schools or in hastily rented apartments.
Israel says the order is a humanitarian gesture to protect residents
from harm while it roots out Hamas fighters entrenched in Gaza City.
The United Nations says so many people cannot be safely moved inside
the besieged enclave without causing a humanitarian disaster. It
warned on Saturday of the threat of deadly water-borne disease
without urgent deliveries of fuel to power Gaza's fresh water
system.
Hamas has vowed to fight until the last drop of blood, and says the
order to leave the north of the enclave is a trick to force
residents to give up their homes. Gaza City mosques have blared
calls telling people to stay.
'EVEN WARS HAVE RULES'
The Israeli military said on Friday tank-backed troops had mounted
raids to hit Palestinian rocket crews and gather information on the
location of hostages, the first official account of ground troops in
Gaza since the crisis began.
The United Nations estimated that tens of thousands of Palestinians
headed south from northern Gaza after the Israeli order on Friday,
adding to 400,000 Gazans already displaced earlier in the week.
"We need immediate humanitarian access throughout Gaza, so that we
can get fuel, food and water to everyone in need," U.N. Secretary
General Antonio Guterres said on Friday. "Even wars have rules."
The United States has firmly backed its ally Israel, but has called
on it to avoid civilian casualties. President Joe Biden said
tackling the humanitarian crisis was a top priority.
"The overwhelming majority of Palestinians had nothing to do with
Hamas and Hamas' appalling attacks," Biden said in a speech. "And
they're suffering as a result as well."
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, on a lightning tour of the
Middle East to rally allies, met Saudi Arabia's foreign minister in
Riyadh and was due to travel to the United Arab Emirates. He has
already visited Israel, Jordan and Qatar.
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza, Ari Rabinovitch, Dan
Williams, Henriette Chacar, Dedi Hayun, Maayan Lubell, Emily Rose
and James Mackenzie in Jerusalem; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by
Jon Boyle)
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