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Palestinians trek across rubble to return to their homes as Gaza ceasefire takes hold

Palestinians trek across rubble to return to their homes as Gaza ceasefire takes hold
Displaced Palestinians leave parts of Khan Younis as they go back to their homes in Rafah, southern Gaza on January 19, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 20 January 2025

Palestinians trek across rubble to return to their homes as Gaza ceasefire takes hold

Palestinians trek across rubble to return to their homes as Gaza ceasefire takes hold
  • Israel’s offensive has killed over 46,000 Palestinians in Gaza, more than half of them women and children
  • People celebrate despite vast scale of destruction and uncertain prospects for rebuilding, says one Gazan 

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip: Even before the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas was fully in place Sunday, Palestinians in the war-battered Gaza Strip began to return to the remains of the homes they had evacuated during the 15-month war.
Majida Abu Jarad made quick work of packing the contents of her family’s tent in the sprawling tent city of Muwasi, just north of the strip’s southern border with Egypt.
At the start of the war, they were forced to flee their house in Gaza’s northern town of Beit Hanoun, where they used to gather around the kitchen table or on the roof on summer evenings amid the scent of roses and jasmine.
The house from those fond memories is gone, and for the past year, Abu Jarad, her husband and their six daughters have trekked the length of the Gaza Strip, following one evacuation order after another by the Israeli military.
Seven times they fled, she said, and each time, their lives became more unrecognizable to them as they crowded with strangers to sleep in a school classroom, searching for water in a vast tent camp or sleeping on the street.
Now the family is preparing to begin the trek home — or to whatever remains of it — and to reunite with relatives who remained in the north.
“As soon as they said that the truce would start on Sunday, we started packing our bags and deciding what we would take, not caring that we would still be living in tents,” Abu Jarad said.
The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting around 250 people. Some 100 hostages are still inside Gaza, at least a third of whom are believed to be dead.
Israel’s offensive has killed more than 46,000 Palestinians in Gaza, more than half of them women and children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not say how many were combatants. Over 110,000 Palestinians have been wounded, it said. The Israeli military says it has killed over 17,000 militants, without providing evidence.
The Israeli military’s bombardment has flattened large swaths of Gaza and displaced 1.9 million of its 2.3 million residents.
Even before the ceasefire officially took effect — and as tank shelling continued overnight and into the morning — many Palestinians began trekking through the wreckage to reach their homes, some on foot and others hauling their belongings on donkey carts.
“They’re returning to retrieve their loved ones under the rubble,” said Mohamed Mahdi, a displaced Palestinian and father of two. He was forced to leave his three-story home in Gaza City’s southeastern Zaytoun neighborhood a few months ago,
Mahdi managed to reach his home Sunday morning, walking amid the rubble from western Gaza. On the road he said he saw the Hamas-run police force being deployed to the streets in Gaza City, helping people returning to their homes.
Despite the vast scale of the destruction and uncertain prospects for rebuilding, “people were celebrating,” he said. “They are happy. They started clearing the streets and removing the rubble of their homes. It’s a moment they’ve waited for 15 months.”
Um Saber, a 48-year-old widow and mother of six children, returned to her hometown of Beit Lahiya. She asked to be identified only by her honorific, meaning “mother of Saber,” out of safety concerns.
Speaking by phone, she said her family had found bodies in the street as they trekked home, some of whom appeared to have been lying in the open for weeks.
When they reached Beit Lahiya, they found their home and much of the surrounding area reduced to rubble, she said. Some families immediately began digging through the debris in search of missing loved ones. Others began trying to clear areas where they could set up tents.
Um Saber said she also found the area’s Kamal Adwan hospital “completely destroyed.”
“It’s no longer a hospital at all,” she said. “They destroyed everything.”
The hospital has been hit multiple times over the past three months by Israeli forces waging an offensive in largely isolated northern Gaza against Hamas fighters it says have regrouped.
The military has claimed that Hamas militants operate inside Kamal Adwan, which hospital officials have denied.
In Gaza’s southern city of Rafah, residents returned to find massive destruction across the city that was once a hub for displaced families fleeing Israel’s bombardment elsewhere in the Palestinian enclave. Some found human remains amid the rubble of houses and the streets.
“It’s an indescribable scene. It’s like you see a Hollywood horror movie,” said Mohamed Abu Taha, a Rafah resident, speaking to The Associated Press as he and his brother were inspecting his family home in the city’s Salam neighborhood. “Flattened houses, human remains, skulls and other body parts, in the street and in the rubble.”
He shared footage of piles of rubble he said had been his family’s house. “I want to know how they destroyed our home.”
The returns come amid looming uncertainty regarding whether the ceasefire deal will bring more than a temporary halt to the fighting, who will govern the enclave and how it will be rebuilt.
Not all families will be able to return home immediately. Under the terms of the deal, returning displaced people will only be able to cross the Netzarim corridor from south to north beginning seven days into the ceasefire.
And those who do return may face a long wait to rebuild their houses.
The United Nations has said that reconstruction could take more than 350 years if Gaza remains under an Israeli blockade. Using satellite data, the United Nations estimated last month that 69 percent of the structures in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed, including over 245,000 homes. With over 100 trucks working full-time, it would take more than 15 years just to clear the rubble away,
But for many families, the immediate relief overrode fears about the future.
“We will remain in a tent, but the difference is that the bleeding will stop, the fear will stop, and we will sleep reassured,” Abu Jarad said.


‘We can’t remain indifferent’ over Gaza: Portugal’s president

‘We can’t remain indifferent’ over Gaza: Portugal’s president
Updated 9 sec ago

‘We can’t remain indifferent’ over Gaza: Portugal’s president

‘We can’t remain indifferent’ over Gaza: Portugal’s president
  • Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa addresses UN General Assembly days after his country recognizes Palestine
  • He calls for Gaza ceasefire, immediate release of hostages, humanitarian assistance

NEW YORK: “We can’t remain indifferent” to the crisis in Gaza, Portugal’s president told the 80th UN General Assembly on Tuesday, days after his country’s recognition of a Palestinian state.

Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa called for a ceasefire, the immediate release of hostages held by Hamas, and humanitarian assistance to the war-ravaged Palestinian enclave.

He stressed the importance of creating political, economic and social conditions that “strengthen the solution of two sovereign states,” which will help rebuild “economies and societies.”

This is what will allow for “peace” for “Israelis and Palestinians so that they can live, not die,” he added.


How war and drought have resulted in Lebanon’s worst water crisis in decades

How war and drought have resulted in Lebanon’s worst water crisis in decades
Updated 1 min 59 sec ago

How war and drought have resulted in Lebanon’s worst water crisis in decades

How war and drought have resulted in Lebanon’s worst water crisis in decades
  • With the Litani River drying and Lake Qaraoun at record lows, aid groups warn the crisis could spiral into a nationwide emergency
  • UN agencies say urgent funding is needed to keep Lebanon’s water crisis from triggering a wider collapse in health, food security, and stability

LONDON: Every morning, Lebanon awakes to the rumble of trucks selling drinking water to households, many of which are unable to afford such necessities in the ongoing economic crisis. That familiar sound is unlikely to fade soon, as the country faces its worst drought in 65 years.

With average rainfall having fallen by almost half over the past year and reservoirs at critically low levels, the shortage is compounding hardships in a country battered by Israeli bombardments since 2023 and an economy in freefall since 2019.

The Litani River National Authority, which manages irrigation and power projects along Lebanon’s main river, said inflows to Lake Qaraoun, the country’s largest reservoir, reached only 45 million cubic meters during the wet season, compared with an annual average of 350 million — the lowest level yet recorded.

The effects are widespread. A Sept. 9 report from the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, found that one-third of Lebanon’s population — more than 1.85 million people — live in drought-prone areas, while 44 percent depend on costly and often unsafe trucked water.

Shrinking snowpacks and earlier melts in Lebanon’s highlands have further reduced water supplies.

Experts say the crisis is not seasonal but existential, fueled by ongoing tensions with Israel and Lebanon being the largest refugee host per capita.

Joseph Saddi, Lebanon’s energy and water minister, called the shortage “the worst in years.” At an August news conference, he said most countries prepare for such conditions with contingency plans, infrastructure upgrades and reserve supplies.

Lebanon, he said, “has seen no serious steps in that direction.”

In April, Saddi met with the heads of water utilities in Lebanon and the Litani River National Authority to draft an emergency plan.

Measures include cracking down on offences, urgent maintenance, forming additional repair teams, rescheduling water distribution fairly and transparently, activating unused wells, and securing energy to keep them running as long as possible each day.

The ministry has also launched a public awareness campaign, prepared a drought-risk map with the UN children’s fund, UNICEF, and on Aug. 6 appealed to donors for funding to equip and operate additional solar-powered wells.

Aid groups say immediate intervention is critical. “The most urgent step is to keep water flowing to people despite the drought, fuel shortages, and damaged infrastructure,” Wehbe Abdul Karim, project manager with the Italian NGO WeWorld in northern Lebanon, told Arab News.

“This means making sure pumps and treatment plants have the electricity and fuel they need, quickly repairing broken pipes and wells, and putting some basic rules on private water trucking so it’s safe and affordable.”

He said aid groups can also help by trucking water to the hardest-hit areas, distributing chlorine and filters, installing solar-powered pumps, and raising awareness on safe and sustainable water use.

But he also underlined the importance of regular testing and clear public updates “to prevent outbreaks of diseases linked to unsafe drinking water.”

Those concerns were echoed by a UN-led water, sanitation, and hygiene group, which in September warned that Lebanon is highly vulnerable to cholera, hepatitis A, and rotavirus due to deteriorating services, displacement, and severe drought.

War has made matters worse. The Israel-Hezbollah conflict, which began with crossborder fire on Oct. 8, 2023, and escalated last September into an Israeli bombing campaign across Lebanon, left at least 150,000 people in southern Lebanon without running water, according to a study by Action Against Hunger, Insecurity Insight, and Oxfam.

More than 30 towns and villages were cut off from supply networks after the Maisat water pumping station and the Wazzani water intake center in Nabatieh governorate sustained severe damage.

The study found that Israeli strikes have caused long-term disruption to fresh water supplies. The World Bank estimates these attacks have resulted in damage worth $171 million to Lebanon’s water, wastewater, and irrigation systems.

Infrastructure destruction extends beyond the south. In Bekaa’s Schmustar, in the east of the country, one well was completely destroyed and five more were damaged, leaving thousands dependent on a tank that fills to only 20 percent capacity.

Since October 2023, at least 24 public water networks in the south have suffered severe damage, with four more moderately damaged.

The agricultural sector has been hit hard, threatening food security. In October 2024, Israeli forces reportedly bombed the main distribution route from the Litani River to the Qasmieh irrigation project, which normally supplies 260,000 cubic meters of water a day to 6,000 hectares of farmland along the southern coast.

“The attacks had devastating consequences for farmers, as water shortages impacted irrigation and food production,” said Christina Wille, the director of the Switzerland-based NGO Insecurity Insight.

She added: “More than 82 percent of the farmers interviewed in southern Lebanon during the research said they couldn’t get enough water to irrigate their crops or to give drinking water to their livestock.”

The effects are evident nationwide. In the Bekaa Valley, 70 percent of potato farmers did not plant this season due to unreliable irrigation, leaving much of the land uncultivated, Ibrahim Tarshishi, head of the National Farmers’ Union, told Lebanese media.

In central and northern Bekaa, many fields went unwatered, slashing production. More than 100,000 tonnes of produce are unsold in storage, while falling global potato prices have further discouraged planting. In the south, citrus and banana farms are also at risk.

Experts say the roots of Lebanon’s water crisis run deeper than conflict or climate. Sami Alawieh, head of the Litani River National Authority, told Lebanese media the problem is “structural, not seasonal.”

He warned of a new phase defined by “climate, drought, and mismanagement” and called for urgent investment in wastewater treatment to prevent Lake Qaraoun from becoming a national liability.

WeWorld’s Abdul Karim agrees, saying Lebanon needs more than “temporary fixes,” but rather “a complete reset in the way water is managed.”

“That begins with fixing old, leaking pipes, infrastructure, treating and reusing wastewater for farming, and looking at smaller desalination projects along the coast,” he said.

“But these steps won’t matter unless deeper reforms are made to reduce political meddling, bring more transparency, and set water prices that are fair without hurting the most vulnerable families.

“Reforestation and better protection of watersheds will also be key as the country faces harsher and more frequent droughts.”

Even as management falters, demand keeps rising. Reliance on private trucking predates the drought and war, growing steadily over the past decade as households supplemented unreliable public services.

The 2019 financial collapse accelerated the trend, with resulting power blackouts also crippling water authorities.

In 2022, UNICEF said per capita water supplies from Lebanon’s public water authorities had decreased considerably since 2019, “falling short of the 35 liters a day considered to be the minimum acceptable quantity.”

To make up for the failures of the public system, more than 60,000 unregulated private wells have been dug, trucked water from private providers has become widespread, and most households are forced to rely on bottled water over concerns about tap water quality.

The financial burden is crushing. About 80 percent of Lebanese now live in poverty, with 36 percent in extreme poverty. The prolonged economic crisis has shrunk gross domestic product by more than 38 percent, according to the World Bank.

The currency has collapsed, inflation is rampant, and the banking sector is paralyzed.

Bottled water is becoming a costly resource for many households, especially in Beirut and the Bekaa. The average price tripled between 2021 and 2022, while the price of trucked water rose by 50 percent.

By 2025, prices for trucked deliveries had risen 60 percent compared with early 2020, according to the September UNHCR report.

In Beirut, a 2,000-liter tank typically costs between $10 and $22, depending on location, vendor, and whether additional pumping is required for higher elevations or rooftop tanks, locals told Arab News. The supply may last a week, depending on household size. For many families, it is now the only option.

The UNHCR report said that addressing Lebanon’s worst drought will require at least $100 million in funding across the water, sanitation, hygiene, and agriculture sectors. 

Without urgent action, UNHCR warns that the current water scarcity risks spiraling into a wider crisis affecting health, food security, education, and stability.


Palestinian dies after being shot during attack by Israeli settlers in West Bank

Palestinian dies after being shot during attack by Israeli settlers in West Bank
Updated 7 min 57 sec ago

Palestinian dies after being shot during attack by Israeli settlers in West Bank

Palestinian dies after being shot during attack by Israeli settlers in West Bank
  • Murad Na’san, 20, hit in the chest during armed raid on the village of Al-Mughayyir, near Ramallah
  • 4 other people shot when settlers, accompanied by military forces, fired at civilians in a public park

LONDON: A Palestinian man was shot and killed on Tuesday during an attack by Israeli settlers in the village of Al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian Health Ministry said.

Amin Aby Alya, head of the local council, told the Wafa news agency that five people were injured by gunfire when armed settlers, accompanied by military forces, shot at civilians in a public park in a southeastern part of the village. One of them, Murad Na’san, 20, was shot in the chest and subsequently died.

Assaults by Israeli settlers in the West Bank have escalated since the start of the war in Gaza almost two years ago, including arson attacks on commercial property, the destruction of agricultural crops including olive trees, assaults on homes and stone-throwing, Wafa said.

Such incidents are rarely prosecuted by Israeli authorities, who have been expanding illegal settlements that now house about 1 million settlers.

At least 1,013 Palestinians were killed by Israeli settlers and soldiers in the West Bank between October 2023 and August this year, according to official Palestinian figures.


Turkiye facing worst drought in over 50 years

Turkiye facing worst drought in over 50 years
Updated 40 min 25 sec ago

Turkiye facing worst drought in over 50 years

Turkiye facing worst drought in over 50 years
  • Water shortages paired with abnormally high temperatures made for a hellish summer in Turkiye

ISTANBUL: Turkiye is experiencing its worst drought in over half a century, with rainfall dropping by 27 percent compared to the last three decades and even more in some regions, according to data published this week.
Between Oct. 1, 2024 and Aug. 31 this year, precipitation in Turkiye averaged at 401.1 mm compared to 548.5 mm between 1991 and 2020, the Turkish State Meteorological Service said in its monthly report.
“Over 11 months, rainfall in Turkiye has dropped to its lowest level in the past 52 years,” the MGM said, noting a reduction of more than 60 percent in southeastern Anatolia, a typically arid region that borders Syria.
Less than 250 mm fell over 11 months, compared to the average rainfall of over 1,000 mm over the past 30 years.
Turkiye’s Mediterranean regions have not been spared, with Marmara and the coast along the Aegean Sea recording the lowest precipitation in 18 years.
Water shortages paired with abnormally high temperatures made for a hellish summer in Turkiye.
The month of July was the hottest in 55 years; average temperatures exceeded those between 1991-2020 by 1.9C, and even broke records with 50.5C in Silopi in the southeast at the end of the month.
Adana, the southern region known for its citrus fruit production, also saw its hottest day in 95 years when it hit 47.5C in early August.
In the west, Cesme’s reservoir lake dropped to 3 percent of its usual water levels — so much so that an old road, normally submerged, reappeared and made it to Turkish TV screens.
The situation triggered multiple forest fires in the west and around Hatay in the south, prompting mosques across the country to pray for rain at the beginning of August.
An NGO study published in early July estimated that 88 percent of Turkiye risks desertification.

 


Gaza war ‘one of the darkest moments’ in UN’s history: Jordan’s king

Gaza war ‘one of the darkest moments’ in UN’s history: Jordan’s king
Updated 56 min 19 sec ago

Gaza war ‘one of the darkest moments’ in UN’s history: Jordan’s king

Gaza war ‘one of the darkest moments’ in UN’s history: Jordan’s king
  • International community should ‘stop entertaining the illusion’ Israel is willing peace partner
  • ‘How long will we be satisfied with condemnation after condemnation without concrete action?’

LONDON: The war in Gaza is “one of the darkest moments” in the UN’s history, Jordan’s King Abdullah II told the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday.

The UNGA “was born 80 years ago, pledging to learn from, not repeat, history. The world vowed never again,” he said.

“However, for almost as long, Palestinians have been living through a cruel cycle yet again; bombed indiscriminately yet again; killed, injured and maimed yet again; displaced and dispossessed yet again; denied rights, dignity, their basic humanity yet again.

“So I must ask, how long? How long will it be before we find a resolution to this conflict, one that safeguards the rights of all sides and allows a level of normalcy in the lives of the families at its core?”

King Abdullah said the ongoing suffering has made him “question the worth and utility of words in capturing the magnitude of the crisis, yet not speaking about it would signal acceptance of the situation and abandonment of our humanity, and that I won’t do.”

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict “remains unique” among the ones the UN has dealt with over eight decades, he added.

“It’s the longest-standing conflict in the world, an illegal occupation of a helpless population by a self-declared democratic nation, and a flagrant violation of repeated UN resolutions, international law and human rights conventions, a failure that should’ve elicited outrage and action, especially from major democracies. Instead, it has been met with decades of inertia.”

He reminded the assembly that the Palestinian cause “has remained on the UN agenda for its entire eight-decade existence,” adding: “How long will we be satisfied with condemnation after condemnation without concrete action?”

King Abdullah criticized the double standards with which Israel is treated, saying: “The current Israeli government’s provocative calls for a so-called Greater Israel can only be realized through the blatant violation of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of its neighbors, and there’s nothing great about that.”

He added: “I can’t help but wonder if a similar outrageous call were made by an Arab leader, would it be met with the same global apathy?”

Urging the international community to “stop entertaining the illusion” that Israel is a willing partner for peace, he warned that its ongoing violations of international law risk inciting “a religious war that would reach far beyond the region and lead to an all-out clash that no nation would be able to escape.”

King Abdullah, who is set to join a delegation of Arab and Muslim leaders meeting with US President Donald Trump in New York to discuss peace principles and post-war governance in Gaza, praised the Jordanian people for working tirelessly to provide relief to Palestinians, even under fire.

He stressed that the two-state solution remains the only viable path to security and prosperity in the region.

“We all know that force is no foundation for security; it’s a prelude for greater violence. Repeated wars are teaching generations of Israelis and Palestinians that their only recourse is the gun. Security will only come when Palestine and Israel begin to coexist,” he said.

“For the past two years, we’ve finally seen the world’s conscience stirring in the courage of ordinary people, from every walk of life and every corner of the globe, raising their voices as one and declaring, ‘It has been too long.’

“This UN must echo that call. It has been too long, and it must act on that call until peace is a reality.”