The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that entered last week on Sunday is fragile. The enormous crowd that arose this Sunday at the Netzarim-corridor proves this, a passage that cuts the north of the Gaza Strip from the rest of Gaza and is monitored by Israel. The corridor would open on Saturday in accordance with the agreements between Israel and Hamas, but remained closed longer than agreed.

Part of the truce between Israel and Hamas was the agreement that displaced Palestinians were gradually returning to their houses in the north of Gaza from the south. But Israel accuses Hamas of not complying with the agreements.

One of the Israeli hostages, Arbel Yehud (28) would be released last Friday, but she is still in the hands of Hamas. That is why Israel kept the border closed on Saturday and Sunday. Hamas has announced that he will leave Yehud free on 1 February.

Thousands of Gazanen therefore stranded along the coast, with their property and their hope for return. The border between North and South is a military zone of about four kilometers wide. On Sunday, Israel would open the Al-Rashidweg, a coastal road that is currently blocked by the Corridor, for Palestinian pedestrians. But also the Salah Al-Dinstraat, which would open for cars, remained closed.

A drone shot of the Palestinian families waiting to return from the south to the north of the Gaza Strip, next to the Al-Rashidweg, west of the Nuseirat Refugee Camp.
Photo Haitham Imad/EPA


Photo Omar al-Quattaa/AFP
Photo Eyad Baba/AFP
Photo Omar al-Quattaa/AFP

Trump wants to clean Gaza

The US President Donald Trump suggested Sunday that the majority of the Gazan population should at least be temporarily taken care of in neighboring countries, such as Egypt and Jordan, to “clean up” the territory. According to Trump, Egypt should take care of about one and a half million Gazans alone. “We’re going to clean up the whole event there and then can say: it’s over.”

Almost the entire civilian population of Gaza, around 2.3 million people, often became displaced during the war, often several times in a row. Trump not only hinted at temporary care in neighboring countries, but also on permanent migration. Saturday he said Hoping that other Arab countries build houses for the refugees, “where the Palestinians might live in peace, for a change.”

Israel said on Saturday, January 25, that it would stop the return of Palestinians to their houses in North Gaza as long as the Israeli hostage agent Arbel Yehud was not released.
Photo Eyad Baba/AFP


Palestinians wait until they can return to their houses in the north of Gaza.
Photo Hatem Khaled/Reuters
A displaced child is on a bus that is loaded with the property of the families trying to return to their houses in the north of Gaza.
Photo Abdel Kareem Hana/AP
A Palestinian child hangs from a car that is loaded with property, waiting for the border crossing with the north of Gaza.
Photo Hatem Khaled/Reuters

‘Palestinians will not accept this’

The Palestinian and Jordanian authorities immediately rejected Trumps suggestion. Egypt has previously strongly expressed the idea of ​​taking care of large groups of Palestinians. The authorities there fear that Israel will then no longer let the refugees Gaza.

Hamas also responded and announced that Palestinians would not accept such a proposal, “also not under the apparently well -intended mom of reconstruction.” According to Hamas, the Palestinians will “build Gaza better than it was” if Israel will eliminate the blockade.

A man is waiting by his car until he can return to his house in North Gaza, after he had to flee to the south of Gaza with many other Palestinians because of Israeli evacuation.
Photo Hatem Khaled/Reuters

Cried of the cold

The BBC Speaked with Gazanen waiting at the border crossing to North Gaza. “We slept here,” said a Palestinian man on Sunday. “The children cried all night of the cold, that’s why we made a campfire.”

“People say that in the north there are no more landmarks in the north,” someone else said. “I want to see that with my own eyes.”

A Palestinian child waits at the campfire next to the road, waiting for the blockage on the route to the north of Gaza is lifted by Israel.
Photo Hatem Khaled/Reuters
The Palestinians who hope to return to their houses were previously driven out of the area by Israel and left for the south of the Gaza Strip.
Photo Hatem Khaled/Reuters




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