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Israeli tanks encircle east Rafah
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Israeli tanks encircle east Rafah

Reuters

CAIRO—Israeli tanks captured the main road dividing the eastern and western halves of Rafah on Friday, effectively encircling the entire eastern side of the city in the southern Gaza Strip.

An advance on Friday to the Salahuddin road that bisects the strip completed the encirclement of the “red zone” where they have ordered residents out.

The assault took place even as a rift widened between Israel and its closest ally the United States, which has blocked shipments of weapons to Israel for the first time since the war began.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday “We will fight with our fingernails” if it must while expressing hope that Israel would overcome its disagreements with President Joe Biden.

Ceasefire talks also broke up on Thursday with no agreement to halt the fighting and release hostages captured in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks that precipitated the war.

Rafah residents described almost constant explosions and gunfire east and northeast of the city on Friday, with intense fighting between Israeli forces and militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

Displaced Palestinians transport their belongings on top of cars as they move to a safer area in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on May 9, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and militants from the Hamas movement. (Photo by AFP).

In harm’s way

Hamas said it ambushed Israeli tanks near a mosque in the east of the city, a sign the Israelis had penetrated several kilometers from the east to the outskirts of the built-up area.

Israel has ordered civilians out of the eastern half of Rafah, forcing tens of thousands of people to seek shelter outside the city, previously the last refuge of more than a million who fled other parts of the enclave during the war.

Israel says it cannot win the war without assaulting Rafah to root out thousands of Hamas fighters it believes are sheltering there.

Hamas says it will fight to defend it.

Aid agencies say the battle puts hundreds of thousands of already displaced civilians in harm’s way.

“It is not safe, all of Rafah isn’t safe as tank shells landed everywhere since yesterday,” Abu Hassan, 50, a resident of Tel al-Sultan west of Rafah told Reuters via a chat app.

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Sealed off

“I am trying to leave but I can’t afford 2,000 shekels ($538) to buy a tent for my family,” he said. “There is an increased movement of people out of Rafah even from the western areas, though they were not designated as red zones by the occupation.

“The army is targeting all of Rafah not only the east with tank shells and airstrikes.”

The Israeli military said its forces in eastern Rafah had located several tunnel shafts and troops backed by an airstrike fought at close quarters with groups of Hamas fighters, killing several.

It said Israeli jets had hit several sites from which rockets and mortars had been fired towards Israel in recent days, including at the Kerem Shalmon crossing point.

Israeli tanks have already sealed off eastern Rafah from the south, capturing and shutting the only crossing between the enclave and Egypt.

More than 34,000 Gazans have been killed in the seven months of war, according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry which said thousands more dead are probably buried under rubble. Israel launched the assault to annihilate Hamas after the Oct. 7 attacks, in which 1,200 people were killed according to Israeli tallies.


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