Hamas's last stronghold: Why the IDF steered clear of Deir al-Balah
The IDF issued an evacuation order for part of Deir el-Balah on Sunday and followed it up with a wave of airstrikes on Monday.
According to reports, the IDF could launch or expand operations in this area. Deir el-Balah is one of the four 'central camps' of Gaza. The military has not operated in most of these areas throughout the over 650-day war. There are many reasons for this, one of which is apparently concern that Hamas holds hostages in the central camps area.
The camps include Nuseirat, Deir el-Balah, El-Bureij, and Maghazi. This is a sizable area of Gaza, perhaps 10% of the overall area of the strip. They are towns built up around refugee camps established after 1948 when large numbers of Arabs fled to Gaza from areas that became Israel.
Initially very small, the Deir el-Balah camp grew in recent years. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency notes that 'Deir El-Balah refugee camp is the smallest refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. It is located on the Mediterranean coast, west of a town of the same name, in central Gaza. Deir el-Balah means 'Monastery of the Dates,' a reference to the abundant date palm groves in the area.' The word 'Deir' in Arabic usually means 'monastery,' even if there isn't an actual monastery there currently.
Deir el-Balah is on the coast. To its east is the Salah al-Din Road, which runs the length of Gaza. To its north is Nuseirat, and across the road are Maghazi and Bureij, which are closer to the Israeli border.
Nuseirat and Bureij border the Netzarim Corridor area, which was held by the IDF until the January ceasefire, when the military pulled back. This enabled Gazans to move back to Gaza City from central Gaza and the al-Mawasi humanitarian area. Deir el-Balah is on the coastal road that leads to the al-Mawasi area. As such, it sits on two key roads that run the length of Gaza.
The area has largely been spared during the war
Deir el-Balah has generally been free from heavy fighting in the war. In April 2024, when the IDF mistakenly killed members of the World Central Kitchen aid group, the strike took place near Deir el-Balah. The group had been accompanying trucks to a warehouse in the area.
The IDF also freed four hostages – Noa Argamani, Shlomi Ziv, Almog Meir Jan, and Andrey Kozlov, from Nuseirat in a June 2024 raid.
This is one of the reasons it has been assumed that hostages may be present in the camp areas. Hamas has strong support in the camps. The terror group emerged from many of the refugee camps, and it has used them to recruit.
Therefore, it is assumed that this is the homeland of Hamas. Throughout the war, Hamas has basically run a rump state of Gaza from the four camps, in addition to parts of Gaza City throughout the war.
It was not always clear why the IDF did not enter the camps in the past. It may have been the hostages, but there may be other reasons.
The area sits between Gaza City and Khan Yunis. The IDF operated many times in Khan Yunis, as well as in places like Jabalya and Shejaia. The IDF cleared out many other UNRWA camps in Gaza. It is not the camps themselves that the IDF was so concerned about.
Nevertheless, the four central camps, which are basically towns and urban areas, have been left mostly unscathed by the war. The decision to ask people to evacuate an area of the coast between Deir el-Balah and al-Mawasi could be a way to pressure Hamas as ceasefire talks stall.
The IDF seems to believe that it controls around 70-75% of Gaza since Operation Gideon's Chariots began in May. The operation was supposed to clear and hold most of Gaza, but it's not clear if the 70% is truly controlled. Hamas continues attacks in southern Gaza and areas of northern Gaza, and Beit Hanun recently had to be reconquered.
Deir el-Balah is an important area of Gaza because it has been left relatively untouched throughout the war. Hamas has held on to this redoubt, and the terror group will want to hold on to the central camps. This is the last real remaining area of Hamas power.
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Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
The desperate struggle to squeeze aid into a starving Gaza
Advertisement Now Israel is pausing the fighting in some parts of Gaza each day to help aid convoys move, approving some imported food for sale in Gaza and allowing aid to be airdropped. But all of it is far too little, far too late, aid officials say. Nothing less than a ceasefire will allow the necessary avalanche of aid to flow safely into Gaza, they say. Israeli leaders' decision to take control of Gaza City throws the aid system into further doubt. To have a real impact, aid agencies say Israel needs to allow in the hundreds of thousands of pallets of aid languishing outside Gaza -- enough to cover around 100 soccer fields, they say -- and help ensure that the aid can be distributed safely. Letting in small numbers of trucks and airdropping supplies is little more than a public relations stunt, aid officials contend. Advertisement 'It's a joke, it's all just theatrics,' Bushra Khalidi, an aid official working on Oxfam's response in Gaza, said last week. 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This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


News24
a day ago
- News24
A Sudanese city is starving: What can be done to help?
Warnings have been coming for months. Last December, the global hunger monitor Integrated Food Security Phase Classification reported famine in two camps near the northwestern Sudanese city of El Fasher, home to hundreds of thousands of displaced people. Even then, they warned Sudan's ongoing civil war could see famine spread into the city by May. The warning was prescient. El Fasher, the capital of the state of North Darfur, has now been under siege for over a year now. This week, the United Nations and a number of its agencies warned that approximately 300 000 people trapped inside the city face starvation. 'WFP [the World Food Program] has not been able to deliver food assistance to El Fasher by road for over a year as all roads leading there are blocked,' the UN aid programme said in a statement on Tuesday. 'The city is cut off from humanitarian access leaving the remaining population with little choice but to fend for survival with whatever limited supplies are left.' 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AFP The situation worsened this past April when the RSF attacked two camps near El Fasher sheltering over 500 000 displaced people. Many fled into the city or nearby towns. Siege on El Fasher has tightened As the Joint Forces inside El Fasher lose ground, the RSF has tightened the siege in recent moments, said Shayna Lewis, senior adviser on Sudan for the US-based group PAEMA (Preventing and Ending Mass Atrocities). 'The Rapid Support Forces have besieged the city for over a year at this point,' she told DW in a televised interview. 'But it's particularly in the past few months that they've tightened that blockade. Nothing is coming in and out. We used to have donkey carts that carried food into the city but now barely anything is able to even be smuggled in.' AFP Locals have said the RSF aims to starve out SAF-allied forces. There are also reports that some of the forces inside the city are preventing civilians from leaving, using them as a protective buffer. 'They attacked us; it was exhausting,' Enaam Mohammed, a Sudanese woman who fled El Fasher for the nearby town of Tawila, told journalists this week. Tawila, around 40km away, has seen a massive influx of around 400 000 displaced people since April. Diseases like cholera and measles are now spreading there. '[They asked us] 'Where are the weapons? Where are the men?'' Mohammed continued, describing her experience with the RSF. If they find someone with a mobile phone, they take it. If you have money, they take it. If you have a good, strong donkey, they take it. Enaam Mohammed Mohammed said she also saw the RSF killing people and raping women. What can be done? Currently, the conflict is at what analysts have described as a 'strategic stalemate'. Alongside other smaller groups, the RSF controls much of western Sudan, while the SAF controls the east. Earlier in July, the RSF set up their own civilian government, effectively splitting Sudan in two. There is no credible peace process and heavy fighting is also ongoing in other parts of Sudan. 'Both parties view the conflict through a zero-sum lens,' analysts at the Italian Institute for International Political Studies (ISPI) wrote earlier this year. 'The victory of one side is entirely dependent on the defeat of the other.' Neither side wants to negotiate, observers say. AFP Exacerbating that situation is foreign backing for the different fighting groups. In July, the US postponed a meeting about Sudan that would have brought together Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt. The Saudis and Egyptians are thought to support the SAF and the UAE, the RSF - all deny providing military aid to Sudanese groups. The meeting is now rumoured to be rescheduled for September. This week, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called SAF leader Burhan to ask for a weeklong ceasefire that would allow aid into El Fasher. Burhan agreed, but the RSF has yet to consent. The impact of the war also goes well beyond the besieged city of El Fasher, the WFP's Kinzli pointed out. The UN regularly calls what is happening in Sudan the world's largest humanitarian crisis. Aid agencies estimate that around 12 million people of Sudan's 46-million-strong population have been displaced by the conflict and that around 150 000 people have died as a result of it. There are famine conditions and infectious diseases in other parts of the country too. 'What we need from the international community is two things,' Kinzli said. 'One, of course, is funding - because the scale of needs in Sudan is just so high. We're looking at 25 million people who face acute hunger and that's a moderate estimate. The resources we have available are just not able to meet that level of need.' The second thing aid agencies like the WFP would like to see is 'increased attention and engagement' with Sudan from the international community, she argued. 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Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Deaf Palestinian uses social media to highlight Gaza's struggles through sign language
Deaf Palestinian uses social media to highlight Gaza's struggles through sign language (Refiles to correct byline) GAZA (Reuters) -Basem Alhabel stood amongst the ruins of Gaza, with people flat on the floor all around him as bullets flew, and filmed himself using sign language to explain the dangers of the war to fellow deaf Palestinians and his followers on social media. Alhabel, 30, who describes himself as a "deaf journalist in Gaza" on his Instagram account, says he wants to raise more awareness of the conflict -- from devastating Israeli air strikes to the starvation now affecting most of the population -- by informing Palestinians and people abroad with special needs. Bombarded by Israel for nearly two years, many Gazans complain the world does not hear their voices despite mass suffering with a death toll that exceeds 60,000 people, according to Gaza health authorities in the demolished enclave. "I wished to get my voice out to the world and the voices of the deaf people who cannot speak or hear, to get their voice out there, so that someone can help us," he said through his friend and interpreter Mohammed Moshtaha, who he met during the war. "I tried to help, to film and do a video from here and there, and publish them so that we can make our voices heard in the world." Alhabel has an Instagram following of 141,000. His page, which shows him in a flak jacket and helmet, features images of starving, emaciated children and other suffering. He films a video then returns to a tent to edit -- one of the many where Palestinians have sought shelter and safety during the war, which erupted when Hamas-led militants attacked Israel in October 2023, drawing massive retaliation. Alhabel produced images of people collecting flour from the ground while he used sign language to explain the plight of Gazans, reinforcing the view of a global hunger monitor that has warned a famine scenario is unfolding. "As you can see, people are collecting flour mixed with sand," he communicated. Alhabel and his family were displaced when the war started. They stayed in a school with tents. "There was no space for a person to even rest a little. I stayed in that school for a year and a half," he explained. Alhabel is likely to be busy for some time. There are no signs of a ceasefire on the horizon despite mediation efforts. Israel's political security cabinet approved a plan early on Friday to take control of Gaza City, as the country expands its military operations despite intensifying criticism at home and abroad over the war. "We want this situation to be resolved so that we can all be happy, so I can feed my children, and life can be beautiful," said Alhabel. (Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Sharon Singleton) Solve the daily Crossword