Gazans bombarded by Israel have no hope and no escape

Gazans bombarded by Israel have no hope and no escape

Palestinians feel dread and hopelessness in the face of what they describe as the worst violence they’ve ever seen.

Most of the 2.3 million people in the Gaza Strip have no electricity and no water. And, with hundreds of Israeli strikes raining down on their tiny enclave, they have nowhere to run.

The Palestinian territory, one of the most crowded places on Earth, has been under siege since Saturday in a near-constant bombardment that Gazan health officials say has killed more than 1,200 people. The blitz is retaliation for a surprise offensive on Israel by Gaza’s ruling group Hamas which the Israeli military says killed more than 1,200 people.

Gaza’s sole power station, which had been working intermittently for days, cut out on Wednesday after running out of fuel. Without power, water can’t be pumped into houses. At night there’s nearly total darkness punctuated by fireballs and the pin-pricks of light from phones used as flashlights.

A Palestinian girl holds two children as she stands on a street in Gaza City on October 12, 2023 as Israeli airstrikes on the enclave continued.—AFP

“I lived through all the wars and incursions in the past, but I have never witnessed anything worse than this war,” said Yamen Hamad, 35, a father-of-four, whose home had been destroyed by Israeli strikes on the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanoun.

At a hospital in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, relatives and friends lined up outside the overloaded morgue where bodies were laid out on the floor because coolers were full or had no power.

The mourners were desperate to bury their loved ones swiftly before the unseasonable heat took its toll. They spoke briefly over the bodies, praying for the souls to rest in peace, before they carried them to graves nearby, with stretchers if they were available, or otherwise without.

A view shows the ruins of Palestinian houses hit by Israeli strikes at al-Shati (Beach) refugee camp, in Gaza City, October 12, 2023.— Reuters

Reuters interviewed more than three dozen people in Gaza, and most echoed Hamad’s sentiments. They painted a picture of dread and hopelessness in the face of what they described as the worst violence they’d ever seen.

With the strip’s only other border, to Egypt, blocked by Egyptian authorities, the people said they were trapped. They feared the worst was yet to come, including a possible ground invasion, as Israel seeks retribution for the deadliest attack in the country’s 75-year history.

That surprise raid, launched on Saturday, saw Hamas fighters burst out of Gaza and kill hundreds of people, leaving corpses strewn around a music festival and a kibbutz community. Scores of Israelis and others have been taken to Gaza as hostages, some paraded through the streets.

The Hamas offensive drew strong condemnation by the United States and other Western governments.

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