Residents escape bombs while trying to flee the Northern strip
Mourners gather around the shrouded bodies of members of the Agha family, killed in an Israeli strike in Khan Yunis in the Gaza Strip on October 14, 2023. Pic/AFP
Palestinians are fleeing in a mass exodus from northern Gaza after Israel’s military told one million people to evacuate. Hamas’ media office says warplanes struck cars fleeing south, killing more than 70 people, at the time of going to press. The Israeli military said it conducted temporary raids in Gaza to battle militants, but that did not appear to be the beginning of a ground invasion.
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Relatives of Israelis abducted during Hamas militants’ attack last weekend pleaded with the UN for the world’s help in getting their loved ones home. Palestinians scrambled to flee northern Gaza on Saturday after the Israeli military ordered nearly half the population to evacuate south and carried out limited ground forays ahead of an expected land offensive a week after Hamas’ bloody, wide-ranging attack into Israel.
A Palestinian wounded in an Israeli air strike on Gaza Strip arrives at al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir el-Balah City, Gaza Strip, on Saturday. Pic/AFP
Israel renewed calls on social media and in leaflets dropped from the air for some 1 million Gaza residents to move south, while Hamas urged people to stay in their homes. Families in cars, trucks and donkey carts packed with possessions crowded a main road heading away from Gaza City as Israeli airstrikes continued to hammer the 40-kilometer (25-mile) long territory, where supplies of food, fuel and drinking water were running low because of a complete Israeli siege.
Egyptian officials said the southern Rafah crossing would open later Saturday for the first time in days to allow foreigners out. Israel said Palestinians could travel within Gaza without being harmed along two main routes from 10 am to 4 pm local time. The Israeli military said “hundreds of thousands” of Palestinians had already heeded the warning and headed south. But some live up to 20 km (12 miles) away, and roads demolished by airstrikes and fuel shortage hindered their journeys.
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Thousands of people crammed into a UN-run school-turned-shelter in Deir al-Balah, a farming town south of the evacuation zone. Many slept outside on the ground without mattresses, or as chairs pulled from classrooms. “I came here with my children. We slept on the ground. We don’t have a mattress, or clothes,” Howeida al-Zaaneen, 63, who is from the northern town of Beit Hanoun, said. “I want to go back to my home, even if it is destroyed.”
The military said its troops conducted temporary raids into Gaza to battle militants and hunted for traces of some 150 people—including men, women and children—who were abducted during Hamas’ shocking October 7 assault on southern Israel. The Gaza Health Ministry said Saturday that over 2,200 people have been killed in the territory, including 724 children and 458 women. The Hamas assault killed more than 1,300 people on the Israeli side, most of them civilians, and roughly 1,500 Hamas militants were killed during the fighting, the Israeli government said.
Fearing a mass exodus of Palestinians, Egyptian authorities erected “temporary” blast walls on Egypt’s side of the heavily-guarded Rafah crossing, which has been closed for days because of Israeli airstrikes, two Egyptian officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media. At least 1,900 Palestinians have been killed by near-constant shelling in Gaza, according to the Health Ministry, including journalists and medics.
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