Israel issues new evacuation orders for Rafah amid expanding offensive in packed city
CBC
Israel ordered new evacuations in Gaza's southern city of Rafah on Saturday, forcing tens of thousands more people to move as it prepares to expand its military operation closer to the heavily populated central area, in defiance of growing pressure amid the war from close ally the United States and others.
As pro-Palestinian protests continued, Israel's military also said it was moving into an area of devastated northern Gaza, where it asserted that the Hamas militant group has regrouped.
Israel has now evacuated the eastern third of Rafah, considered Gaza's last refuge. The United Nations has warned that the planned full-scale Rafah invasion would further cripple humanitarian operations and cause a surge in civilian casualties.
Rafah borders Egypt near the main aid entry points, which are already affected. Israeli troops have captured the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing, forcing it to shut down.
Egypt has refused to co-ordinate with Israel the delivery of aid though the Rafah crossing point because of "the unacceptable Israeli escalation," the state-owned Al Qahera News television channel reported on Saturday, citing an unnamed official. The channel has close ties with Egyptian security agencies.
U.S. President Joe Biden has said he won't provide offensive weapons to Israel for Rafah. On Friday, the Biden administration said there was "reasonable" evidence that Israel had breached international law protecting civilians — Washington's strongest statement yet on the matter.
In response, Ophir Falk, foreign policy adviser to Israel's prime minister, told The Associated Press that Israel acts in compliance with the laws of armed conflict and the army takes extensive measures to avert civilian casualties, including alerting people to military operations via phone calls and text messages.
More than 1.4 million Palestinians — half of Gaza's population — have been sheltering in Rafah, most after fleeing Israel's offensives elsewhere in the territory. The evacuations are forcing some people to return north, where areas are devastated from previous Israeli attacks. Aid agencies estimate that 110,000 had left before Saturday's order, which adds a further 40,000.
"The Israeli army does not have a safe area in Gaza. They target everything," said Abu Yusuf al-Deiri, who was displaced earlier from Gaza City.
Many people have been displaced multiple times, and there are few places left to go. Some fleeing fighting earlier in the week erected tent camps in the city of Khan Younis — half destroyed in an earlier Israeli offensive — and the central city of Deir al-Balah, straining infrastructure.
Some Palestinians are being sent to what Israel has called humanitarian safe zones along the Muwasi coastal strip, which is already packed with about 450,000 people in squalid conditions. The garbage-strewn camp lacks basic facilities.
Georgios Petropoulos, an official with the UN humanitarian agency in Rafah, said aid workers had no supplies to help people set up in new locations. "We simply have no tents, we have no blankets, no bedding, none of the items that you would expect a population on the move to be able to get from the humanitarian system," he said.
The World Food Program (WFP) has warned that it would run out of food for distribution in southern Gaza by Saturday, Petropoulos said — a further challenge as parts of Gaza face what the WFP chief has called "full-blown famine." Aid groups have said fuel will be depleted soon, forcing hospitals to shut down critical operations and halting trucks delivering aid.
The UN agency supporting people in Gaza, known as UNRWA, said about 300,000 people have been affected by evacuation orders in Rafah and Jabalia, but the numbers could likely be more.
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump announced Thursday that he'll nominate anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, putting a man whose views public health officials have decried as dangerous in charge of a massive agency that oversees everything from drug, vaccine and food safety to medical research, and the social safety net programs Medicare and Medicaid.