Aid groups said there would be a high Palestinian death toll if Israeli forces stormed Rafah, and warned of the growing humanitarian crisis in the city, on the coastal enclave’s border with Egypt.
Netanyahu’s office said four Hamas battalions were in Rafah and Israel could not achieve its goal of eliminating the Islamist militants while they remained there. Civilians should be evacuated from the combat zone, it said.
“Therefore, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered the [Israel Defence Forces] and the security establishment to submit to the cabinet a combined plan for evacuating the population and destroying the battalions.”
The statement, issued two days after Netanyahu rejected a Hamas ceasefire proposal that also envisaged the release of hostages held by the Palestinian militant group, gave no further details.
Rafah has become the focus of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza as its forces shift their offensive southwards in response to the October 7 rampage in southern Israel by Hamas gunmen who rule the coastal strip.
Israeli air strikes kill 13 in Rafah after Netanyahu rejects Hamas’ truce terms
Israeli air strikes kill 13 in Rafah after Netanyahu rejects Hamas’ truce terms
More than half Gaza’s 2.3 million people are now sheltering in Rafah, many of them penned up against the border fence with Egypt and living in makeshift tents.
“There is a sense of growing anxiety, growing panic in Rafah because basically people have no idea where to go,” said Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA.
Doctors and aid workers in Rafah are struggling to supply even basic aid and stop the spread of disease.
“No war can be allowed in a gigantic refugee camp,” said Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council, warning of a “bloodbath” if Israeli operations expand there.
The Palestinian Presidency said what it described as Netanyahu’s plans for a military escalation in Rafah aimed to displace the Palestinian people from their land.
“Taking this step threatens security and peace in the region and the world. It crosses all red lines,” said the office of Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Palestinian Authority that exerts partial self-rule in the Israeli occupied West Bank.
An Israeli official who declined to be named said that Israel would try to organise for people in Rafah, most of whom fled there from the north, to be moved back northwards within Gaza ahead of any military operation there.
Gaza’s health ministry said at least 27,947 Palestinians had been confirmed killed in the conflict, 107 of them in the previous 24 hours, and 67,459 injured.
It has said many more could be buried under rubble from Israeli attacks since Hamas militants killed 1,200 people and took 253 hostages in the October 7 attack, according to Israeli tallies.