World

Egypt vows to block Gaza displacement, hardens rhetoric

Quote: Displacement means liquidation and the end of the Palestinian cause and there is no legal or moral or ethical ground to evict people from their homeland. Badr Abdelatty

Palestinians check the debris of the Mushtaha Tower in Gaza City following an Israeli military strike. — Reuters
 
Palestinians check the debris of the Mushtaha Tower in Gaza City following an Israeli military strike. — Reuters

NICOSIA: Egypt said on Friday it would not tolerate mass displacement of Palestinians and what it described as genocide, continuing to ratchet up its criticism of Israel's Gaza offensive as thousands of residents of Gaza City defied Israeli orders to leave. 'Displacement is not an option and it is a red line for Egypt and we will not allow it to happen', Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty told reporters in Nicosia. 'Displacement means liquidation and the end of the Palestinian cause and there is no legal or moral or ethical ground to evict people from their homeland', he said.
His comments are in line with a hardening of Egyptian language this year about Israel's conduct in the enclave, which borders Egypt, even as it has worked with Qatar and the US to try to mediate a ceasefire in the almost two-year-old war. Repeating accusations of genocide levelled by the Egyptian leadership against Israel in recent months, he added: 'What is happening on the ground is far beyond the imagination. There is a genocide in motion there, mass killing of civilians, artificial starvation created by the Israelis', Abdelatty said.
Israel has in the past strongly denied that its actions in Gaza amount to genocide and says they are justified as self defence. It is fighting a case at the International Court of Justice in the Hague that accuses it of genocide and which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has condemned as 'outrageous'.
Israel launched its assault on the Gaza Strip in October 2023, after fighters from Hamas, the Palestinian group, attacked southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 hostages back into Gaza. More than 64,000 Palestinians have since been killed, Gaza health authorities say, with much of the densely populated enclave laid to ruin and its residents facing a humanitarian crisis.


Israel began an offensive in Gaza City on August 10, in what Netanyahu says is a plan to defeat Hamas militants in the part of Gaza where Israeli troops fought most heavily in the war's initial phase. It now controls about 40 per cent of Gaza City, a military spokesperson said. Much of Gaza City was laid to waste in the war's initial weeks in October-November 2023. About a million people lived there before the war and hundreds of thousands are believed to have returned to live among the ruins, especially since Israel ordered people out of other areas and launched offensives elsewhere.
Hamas released a video on Friday of two Israeli hostages seized from Israel in October 2023 and one said he was being held in Gaza City, where the Israeli military has launched a major offensive to wipe out the militant group. Guy Gilboa-Dalal and Alon Ohel are two of 48 people still being held by Hamas in Gaza, with 20 thought to be still alive. The video showed Gilboa-Dalal speaking for around three-and-a-half minutes. He is seen in a car for some of the video dated August 28. He says that he is being held in Gaza City along with several other hostages and that he is afraid of being killed by Israel's offensive on the city. Gilboa-Dalal appears to be in the backseat of a car that is being driven around. As the car passes by buildings, he identifies one as belonging to the Red Cross.
Residents in the city said Israel had bombed several high-rise towers on Friday. Gaza’s health ministry said 30 Palestinians had been killed by the military across Gaza, including 20 in Gaza City. Israel controls 40% of Gaza City, a military spokesperson said on Thursday, as its bombardment forced more Palestinians from their homes there, while thousands of residents defied Israeli orders to leave, remaining behind in the ruins in the path of Israel's latest advance. — Reuters