RAFAH: War-weary Gazans flooded towards coastal areas of the Gaza Strip’s southern city of Rafah on Sunday, fleeing heavy bombardment in eastern zones after Zionist entity ordered them to evacuate.

"We endured three days that can be considered hell,” said Mohammed Hamad, a 24-year-old resident of eastern Rafah who was among the 300,000 Palestinians that Zionist entity says have fled the fighting. Despite international opposition to any major military operation in Rafah, Zionist entity has shifted its focus to the heavily populated area in what it says is an effort to destroy the last bastion of Hamas. Eastern parts of the city have been heavily bombarded in recent days, according to witnesses, as Zionist entity sent tanks and ground troops into the areas in "targeted raids”.

"They were among the worst nights for us since the beginning of the war,” Hamad told AFP from Al-Mawasi, an area Zionist entity has designated a "humanitarian zone” despite aid groups warning that it is unprepared for such an influx. Rafah’s population had swelled to around 1.4 million after hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled fighting in other areas of the Gaza Strip and sought shelter there during more than seven months of war.

"They started by distributing flyers in the morning, and immediately began brutal artillery and aerial bombardment without giving people a chance to think or organise their belongings properly,” Hamad said. AFP photographers saw dozens of families loading furniture and household items on trucks and fleeing from Rafah, many heading for Khan Yunis, the main city in the south of the Palestinian territory. Many people, especially women and children, lingered on streets outside their homes before moving out.

Zionist entity’s offensive has killed at least 35,034 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry. Zionist entity forces on Tuesday seized and closed the Palestinian side of the Rafah crossing into Egypt—through which all fuel passes into Gaza.

"There are no medical services or humanitarian aid being provided to the displaced people in the northern Gaza Strip,” said Mahmud Basal, spokesman for Gaza’s civil defense agency. "What we are witnessing in terms of killing and destruction reminds us of the early days of the aggression.”

Umm Mohammed Al-Mughayyir said she has had to move her family seven times to escape the fighting. "We have reached a point where we wish for death,” she said. "We have people with special needs, elderly individuals, and children with us. Where do we go when the bombardment never stops, day and night?”

All eyes have been on Rafah in recent weeks, where the population had swelled to around 1.5 million after hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled fighting in other areas of the Gaza Strip.

The Zionist entity military on Saturday expanded an evacuation order for eastern Rafah and said 300,000 Palestinians had left the area. "The latest evacuation orders affect close to a million people in Rafah. So where should they go now? There is no safe place in Gaza!” Volker Turk, the UN high commissioner for human rights, said in a statement.

"These exhausted, famished people, many of whom have been displaced many times already, have no good options. He said a full-scale offensive could have a "catastrophic impact... including the possibility of further atrocity crimes.”

"I can see no way that the latest evacuation orders, much less a full assault, in an area with an extremely dense presence of civilians, can be reconciled with the binding requirements of international humanitarian law and with the two sets of binding provisional measures ordered by the International Court of Justice.” Volker said he was deeply distressed by fast-deteriorating conditions in Gaza, saying the latest evacuation orders had triggered "massive displacement of an already profoundly traumatized population”.

He said the towns supposed to receive those displaced from Rafah had already been "reduced to rubble”. Turk also voiced concern at reports of indiscriminate rocket fire from Gaza. He said a full scale offensive on Rafah "cannot take place” and called on all states with influence to do everything in their power to prevent it. He also called on Zionist entity and Palestinian armed groups to agree a ceasefire, and for all hostages to be released immediately. — AFP