GAZA: Zionist strikes on Saturday hit parts of Gaza including Rafah where the Zionist entity expanded an evacuation order and the UN warned of "epic” disaster if an outright invasion of the crowded city occurs. AFP journalists, medics and witnesses reported strikes across the coastal territory, where the UN says humanitarian relief is blocked after Zionist troops defied international opposition and entered eastern Rafah this week, effectively shutting a key aid crossing and suspending traffic through another.
At least 21 people were killed during strikes in central Gaza and taken to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah city, a hospital statement said. Bodies covered in white lay on the ground in a courtyard of the facility. A man in a baseball cap leaned over one body bag, clasping a dust-covered hand that protruded. The feet of another corpse poked from under a blanket bearing the picture of a large teddy bear.
In Rafah, witnesses reported intense air strikes near the crossing with Egypt, and AFP images showed smoke rising over the city. Other strikes occurred in north Gaza, witnesses said. Zionist troops on Tuesday seized and closed the Palestinian side of the Rafah crossing — through which all fuel passes into Gaza — after ordering residents of eastern Rafah to evacuate.
While mediation efforts towards a truce and hostage release appear to stall, Hamas armed wing released a video of a captive seen alive in Gaza — the third such footage released in less than a month. The man is seen speaking in the 11-second clip, which is superimposed with text in Arabic and Hebrew that reads: "Time is running out.”
The new evacuation order for eastern Rafah was, posted on social media platform X by military spokesman Avichay Adraee. The Zionist offensive has killed at least 34,971 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry. A US State Department report on Friday said it was "reasonable to assess” that the Zionist entity violated norms on international law in its use of weapons from the United States but it did not find enough evidence to block shipments.
The State Department submitted its report two days after President Joe Biden publicly threatened to withhold certain bombs and artillery shells if the Zionist entity goes ahead with an all-out assault on Rafah, where the United Nations said 1.4 million had been sheltering. Hamas in a statement said the Zionist entity’s "continued control” and closure of the Rafah crossing exacerbate the "humanitarian catastrophe” in the besieged territory.
Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged to "eliminate” Hamas battalions in Rafah, after the army in January said it had dismantled the Hamas command structure in northern Gaza. But on Saturday Adraee said Hamas "is trying to rebuild” there, and ordered evacuations from the north’s Jabalia refugee camp and Beit Lahia areas.
After rising criticism from Washington over the civilian impact of the Zionist entity’s war against Hamas, the threat to withhold weapons was the first time Biden raised the ultimate US leverage over the Zionist entity — its military aid which totals $3 billion annually. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Friday that Gaza risked an "epic humanitarian disaster” if the Zionist entity launched a full-scale ground operation in Rafah.
On Friday the White House said it did not yet see a "major ground operation” in Rafah but was watching the situation "with concern”. Biden’s administration had already paused delivery of 3,500 bombs as the Zionist entity appeared ready to attack Rafah. More than 100,000 people fled the city after the initial evacuation order, the United Nations said on Friday.
The Zionist entity on Saturday gave a figure of 300,000, as more Rafah residents piled water tanks, mattresses and other belongings onto vehicles and prepared to flee again. Malek al-Zaza, with a trim grey beard, said he has been displaced three times now during the war and found "no food” and "no water” in central Gaza’s Nuseirat camp where he has returned. "We only have God looking out for us,” he said.
Reiterating his calls for a ceasefire, Guterres said: "We are actively engaged with all involved for the resumption of the entry of life-saving supplies — including desperately needed fuel — through Rafah and Kerem Shalom crossings.”
The evacuation order on Saturday told residents to go to the "humanitarian zone” of Al-Mawasi, on the coast northwest of Rafah. That area has "extremely limited access to clean drinking water, latrines” and other basic services, said Sylvain Groulx, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) emergency coordinator in Gaza. The army late Friday said rocket fire from Gaza hit Beersheba, the Zionist entity’s main southern city, for the first time since December. One civilian was wounded. – AFP