Tens of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza flee for 2nd time in Israel-Hamas war

Tens of thousands of already displaced Palestinian families took flight again in a new mass exodus in central Gaza on Thursday as Israeli forces mounting a major advance pounded areas already teeming with those driven out of the north.

Further south, Israeli forces struck the area around a hospital in the heart of Khan Younis, the Gaza Strip’s main southern city, where residents feared a new ground push into territory crowded with families made homeless in 12 weeks of war.

Israel has escalated its ground war in Gaza sharply since just before Christmas despite public pleas from its closest ally, the United States, to scale the campaign down in the closing weeks of 2023.

The main focus of fighting is now in central areas south of the wetlands that bisect the Gaza Strip, where Israeli forces  have ordered civilians out as their tanks advance.

‘Nowhere to go’

Tens of thousands of people fleeing the huge Nusseirat, Bureij and Maghazi districts of central Gaza were heading south or west on Thursday into the already overwhelmed city of Deir al-Balah along the Mediterranean coast, crowding into hastily built camps of makeshift tents.

“Over 150,000 people — young children, women carrying babies, people with disabilities & the elderly — have nowhere to go,” the main UN organization operating in Gaza, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), said in a social media post decrying what it called “forced displacement” under Israeli evacuation orders.

The eastern part of Bureij was a theatre of heavy fighting on Thursday morning, with Israeli tanks pushing in from the  north and east, residents and militants said.

“That moment has come. I wished it would never happen, but it seems displacement is a must,” said Omar, 60, who noted he had been forced to move with at least 35 family members.

“We are now in a tent in Deir al-Balah because of this brutal Israeli war,” he told Reuters by phone, declining to give a second name for fear of reprisals. “Israel is killing doctors, social media influencers, journalists and civilians.”

Israel says it is doing what it can to protect civilians and blames Hamas for operating among them, which Hamas denies.

Heavy bombardment

Yamen Hamad, living in a school in Deir al-Balah since fleeing from the north, said the new refugees arriving from Bureij and Nusseirat were setting up tents wherever there was open ground.

With food running out, he said he had made a perilous trip to Rafah near the Egyptian border to buy a 25-kilogram sack of flour for his family.

Khan Younis, the main southern city where Israeli forces advanced this month after a truce collapsed, came under heavy  bombardment on Thursday morning from warplanes and tanks near the Al-Amal hospital, west of Israeli positions.

A grey-white plume of smoke towers over a cityscape.
A smoke plume erupts over Khan Younis from Rafah in the southern Gaza strip during Israeli bombardment on Wednesday. (Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images)

The Palestinian Red Crescent, which runs the hospital and has its headquarters nearby, said 10 Palestinians were killed  and 12 wounded in one bombardment there, the third strike targeting the area around the hospital in less than an hour.

Residents said they believed Israeli forces were trying to provoke a new exodus ahead of a further ground assault in the  city.

Scenes of anguish at southern hospital

Nearby at Nasser Hospital, the main hospital in Khan Younis and largest still functioning in the enclave, women and children shrieked as the dead and wounded were brought in.

A toddler lay motionless on a cot while medics tried to revive him; one doctor nodded “no,” signalling the boy was dead.

A woman held back two wailing girls, covered in dust by the side of a bed, as a baby wrapped in a bloody white shroud was placed by the legs of another body wrapped in a blanket.

WATCH | Israel vows to continue fighting in Gaza as humanitarian crisis deepens:

Israel vows to continue fighting in Gaza as humanitarian crisis deepens

Israel is vowing to continue fighting in Gaza as it escalates attacks in the central area of the region. Meanwhile, critics warn the humanitarian crisis is deepening.

Palestinian officials reported 50 people killed in strikes in Khan Younis and in the central area. Israel reported three more of its soldiers killed in fighting in central and southern areas, bringing the toll in the ground campaign to 169. The past  week has seen some of its heaviest losses of the war so far.

Israel says it will not halt its ground campaign in Gaza until it annihilates the Hamas movement which controls the  enclave. The war erupted when Hamas militants crossed the border and killed 1,200 people and captured 240 hostages on a rampage through Israeli towns on Oct. 7.

The Israeli assault has laid much of Gaza to waste.

Hamas’s elimination still Israel’s goal

According to Palestinian authorities, more than 21,000 people — nearly one per cent of Gaza’s 2.3 million population — have been confirmed killed, and it’s feared thousands more dead are lost in the ruins.

Virtually all residents have been driven from their homes at least once and many have been forced to flee several times. Only a handful of hospitals are still functioning.

Palestinians say wiping out Hamas, which has been sworn to Israel’s destruction for decades, is an unachievable aim, given the militant group’s diffuse structure and deep roots in a territory it has ruled since 2007.

Two men wearing vests that say PRESS sit at laptops and hold their smartphones toward the sky. A cityscape including minarets is visible in the background.
Palestinian journalists attempt to connect to the internet using their phones in Rafah on the southern Gaza Strip on Wednesday. (AFP via Getty Images)

Israel says that since Oct. 7, the deadliest day in its history, it has no choice but war to safeguard its security and return more than 100 hostages still believed held by militants. It claims to have killed 8,000 fighters so far.

But its Western allies worry the huge civilian toll will radicalize a new generation of Palestinians and spread fighting across the Middle East. This week, Iran-backed groups have attacked U.S. forces in Iraq and commercial shipping in the Red Sea.

U.S. President Joe Biden warned this month that “indiscriminate bombing” jeopardized sympathy for Israel among its allies. Washington has said Israel should make a transition from full-scale ground war to a targeted campaign against Hamas leaders.

European countries that back Israel’s right to self-defence have taken this month to call for a sustainable ceasefire, a  position French President Emmanuel Macron took on a phone call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday.

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