Tens of thousands of Palestinians seek shelter after Israeli assaults
across the West Bank
[February 28, 2025]
By JULIA FRANKEL, AREF TUFAHA and JALAL BWAITEL
JENIN, West Bank (AP) — When Israeli snipers took positions in her
neighborhood, Haleemeh Zawaydeh knew her family needed to leave quickly.
As the snipers' gunfire rang out, the 63-year-old matriarch said there
was no time to pack as she and 14 other family members fled on foot.
The invasion of Jenin was faster than past Israeli assaults, she said.
And, now, like some 37,000 other Palestinians the U.N. estimates have
been driven out by a month-old offensive against militant groups in the
occupied West Bank, Zawaydeh and her family are waiting to return to the
place they’ve long called home.
But it's unclear if Israel will let them. Israel’s assault has mostly
emptied four refugee camps — sites that originated to house Palestinians
driven from homes in the 1948 war surrounding Israel's creation and have
since grown into densely built up towns or neighborhoods.
Across the four camps, troops have ripped up roads and destroyed
buildings, infrastructure, and water and electricity lines. The Israeli
defense minister said Monday that troops were preparing to stay for a
year and would prevent Palestinians from returning.
That leaves thousands who hail from among the poorest areas of the West
Bank in dire straits as many are forced to rent temporary housing in
neighboring villages. OCHA, the U.N.’s humanitarian agency, said there
is an “urgent need for cash assistance” for 4,000 families to meet rent
needs.
Zawaydeh said she was safe now at her shelter outside Jenin, but not at
ease.
“I was born and raised in the camp, and now I have grown up and I still
live in the camp,” she said. “There is no place that can replace the
camp.”

The displacement is the biggest since the 1967 war
Many Palestinians displaced from their West Bank homes are renting
temporary housing or relying on friends or family to take them in. Some
are staying in university dorms, others in makeshift shelters. Help is
limited: The Palestinian Authority is strapped for cash, and the main
U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees, known by the acronym UNRWA, has
been handicapped by Israeli legislation.
“The West Bank has never seen large-scale forced displacement of the
level we’re seeing now" since 1967, said Roland Friedrich, the West Bank
field director for UNRWA. During the 1967 Mideast War, some 250,000
Palestinians were forced from the West Bank when Israel seized the
territory along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.
After announcing a widespread crackdown against West Bank militants on
Jan. 21 — just two days after it began a ceasefire with Hamas in Gaza —
Israeli forces descended on Jenin camp, as they have dozens of times
since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. But unlike past operations,
Israeli forces also pushed deeper and more forcefully into several other
nearby camps known as bastions of militant groups, including Tulkarem,
Far’a and Nur Shams.
Israel's military says it has engaged in fierce battles with Palestinian
militants inside the camps, which are now mainly emptied of their
civilian populations.
The dispersals are stirring bitter memories of the 1948 war over
Israel’s creation, when some 750,000 Palestinians were expelled from or
fled their homes in what's now Israel. Forcible population transfers are
banned under international law, and, if implemented as a policy, could
be a war crime, rights groups say.
The emptying of the West Bank camps comes as Israel’s government and
military have embraced U.S. President Donald Trump’s call for pushing
out the population of the Gaza Strip permanently.
Troops have demolished homes in the camps
In Nur Shams, a smaller refugee camp with a population of roughly
13,700, a number of displaced people returned Wednesday to clear what
possessions they could from their homes after learning the Israeli
military had slated them for demolition. Palestinians said the military
puts out maps of intended demolitions in the camps. Asked the reasons
for the demolitions, the military said it could not discuss operational
plans.
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Residents of the West Bank urban refugee camp of Nur Shams evacuate
their homes and carry their belongings as the Israeli military
continues its operation in the area on Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025. (AP
Photo/Majdi Mohammed)

Mohammed Abdullah took advantage of the brief access to visit the
grave of his son, Ali, who he said was killed by Israeli troops
during a previous incursion into the camp. He hadn’t been able to
visit since being forced out two weeks ago.
Abdullah then packed up his family’s things from his home. No one
can take everything, he said. “Every person has memories in his
home, in his neighborhood, in the streets.”
The damage to the camps has been extensive. In Jenin camp, troops
have demolished over 100 homes, Friedrich said. In Tulkarem camp,
they have destroyed about 100 housing units and at least 300
commercial shops and set fire to at least 10 homes, according to the
local Awda community center.
Families have scattered among shelters
At a charity for helping the blind in Jenin, converted into a
shelter for those driven from the camp, barefoot children swung from
monkey bars while their parents smoked cigarettes and looked on.
Some 85 people from 23 families have taken up at the shelter. Rooms
have been turned into separate dorms for men and women and children.
Some have beds, others have mats on the floor. The charity relies on
donations to feed its new residents.
Facing mounting financial pressure and worried for their homes, many
families have tried to return to the camps only to be blocked by the
military.
“Every day, we try to go back to the camp, hoping to enter, but they
prevent us,” said Nazmi Turkman, 53, who fled Jenin camp a month
ago. “They’ve set up checkpoints, placed tanks, and stationed
soldiers. Even drones are flying around the people."
"God willing, we will return soon,” he said. But he said he has no
idea if his home still stands.
There are few resources to help the displaced
The Palestinian Authority, the body charged with administering
affairs in pockets of the West Bank where the camps lie, has
denounced the wave of displacement. It says it has dispatched over
16 trucks of aid and sent funds to first responders.

But its ability to help is limited. It has been left cash-strapped
by the war, with Israel for months holding up tax revenues it needs
to pay its workers. It is also largely detested across the
territory, especially in the refugee camps, where it is seen as a
tool of Israeli authorities.
“What is happening in the West Bank is a continuation of what the
Israeli authorities did in the Gaza Strip,” said Nabil Abu Redeineh,
spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. “What is
happening will only lead to escalation, the repercussions of which
will be felt throughout the region.”
UNRWA, too, is hampered. In the past, it could coordinate
evacuations with the Israeli military. But new Israeli laws ban any
interaction between Israeli authorities and the agency, making it
difficult to evacuate people or ascertain when they will be allowed
back, Friedrich said.
On Tuesday, a small group of displaced men gathered outside Tulkarem
camp, holding signs reading “The right of return is sacred – No to
displacement.”
Nihad al-Shaweesh, head of a local political council for Nur Shams
camp, said they were there to “tell the whole world and all parties
that we will not accept displacement.”
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