Wednesday, January 15, 2025 | Rajab 14, 1446 H
scattered clouds
weather
OMAN
20°C / 20°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Gazans amid the rubble of homes flattened by fighting

A residential building that housed the apartment of five disabled Palestinian siblings after it was bombed by Israel in Gaza. —Reuters
A residential building that housed the apartment of five disabled Palestinian siblings after it was bombed by Israel in Gaza. —Reuters
minus
plus

BEIT LAHIA: Dozens of homes were destroyed during five days of fighting, which erupted when the Israeli military launched deadly strikes on top militants from the Islamic Jihad militant group.


Nabhan family, has been trying to care for her children and grandchildren, many of whom have disabilities, since they were left homeless on Saturday.


"I borrow clothes from the neighbours for them. I didn't take anything with me," she said, in the Bir al Najeh neighbourhood of northern Gaza.


The family said they were warned in a phone call from the Israeli military that a strike was imminent, but the army did not detail why it targeted the house when asked.


In total, 103 homes were completely destroyed and 140 severely damaged in the fighting, the United Nations said on Tuesday, citing officials in Gaza.


"People were screaming and we ran away... now 45 people are staying here, where will they go? They need shelter," Nabhan said.


Israel and Palestinians in Gaza have fought multiple wars in recent years.


The ruins of past conflicts are dotted across the densely populated Palestinian territory.


With Gaza's poverty rate at 53 per cent, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, few people can afford to rebuild their homes.


In Deir al Balah in central Gaza, children clambered atop a huge mound of concrete and rebar flattened by Israeli bombardment.


In the tightly-packed neighbourhood, Mohammed Zidan's home escaped a direct hit but the blast was so powerful it blew out the walls.


"Because you want to strike one person, you don't need to destroy a whole apartment complex," said the 29-year-old.


"I'm a young man, living in my house, with my children in my home. I'm focusing on my work. What's my fault, that you make me pay the price?"


As Zidan stepped over the remains of his bedroom on Monday, Palestinians elsewhere were commemorating the Nakba, or catastrophe.


It marks the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes, in the war which erupted when Israel was created in 1948.


"We will stay living the life of the Nakba, continuously," said Zidan, who has taken to sleeping on the street behind his home.


A fragile ceasefire has largely held since late Saturday, ending the repeated rounds of Israeli strikes and volleys of rocket fire launched by Palestinian militants.


The fighting killed 33 people in Gaza, including children as well as militants, and two civilians in Israel. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon