Gaza has become a 'human chessboard' for displaced people, UN official says

Christmas Eve proved to be one of the deadliest nights since the Hamas-Israel war began on 7 October.

A man holds a child close while standing in the rubble of an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip.

A team leader for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has said there is no safe space in Gaza for people to go to. Source: Getty / NurPhoto

Key Points
  • A UN humanitarian team leader deployed in Gaza has said there is "no safe place" to which people can flee.
  • US officials have repeatedly said they expect Israel to scale down its operations into a more low-intensity phase.
  • Gaza officials said Israeli airstrikes on Christmas Eve killed more than 100, with the death toll now nearly 20,700.
Many Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have followed Israeli army evacuation orders and sought safety in designated areas only to find there is little space left in the densely populated enclave, a UN humanitarian team leader said on Monday.

Gemma Connell, deployed in Gaza for several weeks now, described what she called a "human chessboard" in which thousands of people, displaced many times already, are on the run again and there is no guarantee a destination will be safe.
The United States, Israel's staunchest ally in its war against Hamas, has for weeks pressured Israel to take further steps to minimise civilian harm by identifying safe areas and clearing humanitarian routes for people to escape.

"People were heading up south with mattresses and all of their belongings in vans and in trucks and in cars in order to try and find somewhere safe," said Connell, who on Monday visited the Deir al-Balah neighbourhood in central Gaza.
"I've spoken to many people. There's so little space left here in Rafah that people just don't know where they will go and it really feels like people being moved around a human chessboard because there's an evacuation order somewhere.

"People flee that area into another area. But they're not safe there," said Connell, team leader for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

In response to Connell's statement, an Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) spokesperson said the military has sought to evacuate civilians from areas of fighting but Hamas systematically attempts to prevent that effort.
The army spokesperson said the Palestinian militant group uses civilians as human shields, an accusation the group denies.

The Gaza Strip is only 12km wide, and its 360 square km of land — about half the area of Canberra — is home to an estimated 2.1 million people.

That's more than four times the number of people living in the Australian capital Canberra and about as many as live in Brisbane.

This makes the Gaza Strip one of the most densely populated places on the planet, with 6,507 people in every square km on average, around the same as Hong Kong. Australia's population density is 3.5 people per square km.

'No safe place in Gaza'

Connell described the death of a nine-year-old boy named Ahmed in al-Aqsa hospital in Deir Al-Balah, where many of the wounded by Israeli airstrikes overnight were brought and where she spent around 1-1.5 hours.

"He was not in an area under an evacuation order, he was in an area that was supposed to be safe. There is no safe place in Gaza," she said, adding that new airstrikes took place when she was at the hospital and she witnessed wounded being brought in.
She shared the text of a notification from the Israeli military urging residents of at least half a dozen central Gazan neighbourhoods to evacuate on Friday.

It says the IDF will soon be operating in their neighbourhood and urges them to evacuate "temporarily and move to shelters" in Deir al-Balah.

"The IDF will act against Hamas wherever it operates, with full commitment to international law, while distinguishing between terrorists and civilians, and taking all feasible precautions to minimize harm to civilians," the army spokesperson said.

US officials have repeatedly said they expect Israel to scale down its operations to a more low-intensity phase of more targeted and surgical operations.

However, Israeli operations have intensified.

Christmas Eve proved to be one of the deadliest nights in the 11-week-old war between Israel and Hamas, as Palestinian health officials in Gaza said Israeli airstrikes in central and southern Gaza killed more than 100 Palestinians, bringing the death toll to nearly 20,700.
As Palestinians mourned their losses, Israeli Prime Minister against Hamas militants who in a cross-border attack on 7 October killed 1,200 people and abducted 240, according to Israel's official figures.

The war between Hamas and Israel is the latest escalation in a long-standing conflict.

Hamas is a Palestinian political and military group, which has governed the Gaza Strip since the most recent elections in 2006.

Hamas’s stated aim is to establish a Palestinian state and stop the Israeli occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, illegal under international law.

Hamas in its entirety is listed as a terrorist organisation by the European Union and seven other countries, including Australia. But the UN Assembly rejected classifying Hamas as a terrorist group in a 2018 vote.

In 2021 the International Criminal Court opened an investigation into alleged Israeli war crimes in the Palestinian territories dating back to 2014, including the recent attacks of both Israel and Hamas.

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5 min read
Published 26 December 2023 5:29pm
Source: AAP, SBS


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