Monday, April 29, 2024 | Shawwal 19, 1445 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
28°C / 28°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

UN aid chief warns of possible spillover into Egypt

Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes take shelter at the border with Egypt, in Rafah. — Reuters
Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes take shelter at the border with Egypt, in Rafah. — Reuters
minus
plus

GENEVA: The United Nations aid chief warned on Thursday of the possibility of a spillover of Palestinians amassed in Rafah into Egypt if Israel launches a military operation against the border town.


More than one million Palestinians are crammed into Rafah at the southern tip of the Gaza Strip, on the border with Egypt. Many are living in tent camps and makeshift shelters after fleeing Israeli bombardments elsewhere in Gaza.


The Israeli military says it wants to flush out Palestinian groups from hideouts in Rafah and free captives being held there after the rampage in Israel on October 7, but has given no details of a proposed plan to evacuate civilians.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who faces growing international pressure to hold off on the planned assault, has given no indication as to when the offensive might take place.


"The possibility of a military operation in Rafah, with the possibility of the (border) crossing closing down, with the possibility of spillover... a sort of Egyptian nightmare... is one that is right before our eyes," Martin Griffiths told diplomats at the United Nations in Geneva.


He said the notion that the people of Gaza could evacuate to a safe place was an "illusion".


"We must all hope that friends of Israel and those who care about Israel's security give them good counsel at this moment," Griffiths said.


The United Nations has said an Israeli offensive on Rafah could "lead to a slaughter".


Speaking at the same meeting as Griffiths, Mirjana Spoljaric, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said the absence of a clear evacuation plan, including for the sick and elderly, would bring suffering to a new level.


"The suffering on both sides, the carnage we have seen since the 7th of October will reach unimaginable depths if operations on Rafah are intensified the way they have been announced," Spoljaric said.


Gaza will need a new 'Marshall Plan' to recover from the conflict between Israel and Hamas, a UN trade body official said on Thursday, adding that the damage was already about four times that endured during a previous war.


"This will need a new Marshall Plan," Richard Kozul-Wright, a director at the UN trade body (UNCTAD), told a UN meeting in Geneva, referring to a plan for Europe's economic recovery after World War Two. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon