Israeli military warns Palestinians not to return to war-torn northern Gaza
Displaced Palestinians have tried to reach their homes in the devastated area.
The Israeli military has renewed warnings for Palestinians in Gaza not to return to the embattled territory’s north.
The warning came a day after Gaza hospital officials said five people had been killed as crowds of displaced residents tried to reach their homes in the war-torn area.
Northern Gaza was an early target of Israel’s war against Hamas and vast parts of it have been flattened, forcing much of the area’s population to flee south.
While around 250,000 people are said to be living in the north, the Israeli military has prevented most displaced people from returning throughout the six-month-long war, saying the area is an active battle zone.
Israeli military spokesman Avichay Adraee wrote on X that Palestinians should stay in southern Gaza, where they have been told to shelter, because the north is a “dangerous combat zone”.
People appeared to be heeding the new warning, especially after the violence on Sunday.
Hospital authorities in Gaza said that five people were killed by Israeli forces while trying to travel north to their homes.
The Israeli military had no immediate comment and the precise circumstances behind the deaths were not immediately clear.
Anaam Mohammad, who was displaced from the northern city of Beit Hanoun and was trying to return, said the military was allowing women and children to cross, but when a group of Palestinians did not make room for them to pass, two tanks arrived and opened fire.
Forces also threw smoke bombs, dispersing the crowd.
“People started to run away. People were afraid and could not take the risk and enter a dangerous area,” she said.
Ahead of the violence on Sunday, throngs of people crowded a coastal road and moved north by foot and donkey cart. The returnees said they were prompted to make the dangerous journey because they were fed up with the difficult conditions they are forced to live under while displaced.
Israel wants to try to delay the return to prevent militants from regrouping in the north, while Hamas says it wants a free flow of returnees.
The war has had a staggering toll on civilians in Gaza, with most of the territory’s 2.3 million people displaced by the fighting and living in dire circumstances, with little food and often in tents and no end in sight to their misery.
Large swathes of the urban landscape have been damaged or destroyed, leaving many displaced Palestinians with nowhere to return to.
Famine is said to be imminent in the hard-hit north, where aid has struggled to reach because of the fighting. Israel has opened a new crossing for aid trucks into the north as it ramps up aid deliveries to the besieged enclave.
However, the United Nations says the surge of aid is not being felt in Gaza because of persistent distribution difficulties.
The UN food agency said it managed to deliver fuel and wheat flour to a bakery in isolated Gaza City in the north for the first time since the war started.
The conflict started on October 7, when Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians, in a surprise attack and incursion into southern Israel. Around 250 people were seized as hostages by the militants and taken to Gaza. A deal in November freed about 100 hostages, leaving about 130 in captivity, although Israel says about a quarter of those are dead.
Israeli bombardments and ground offensives in Gaza have killed more than 33,700 Palestinians and wounded over 76,200, the Gaza Health Ministry says.
The ministry doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants in its tally, but says women and children make up two-thirds of the dead.
Israel says it has killed over 12,000 militants during the war, but it has not provided evidence to back up the claim.