Gazans back in war-ravaged Jabalia 'shocked' by destruction - GulfToday

Gazans back in war-ravaged Jabalia 'shocked' by destruction

Gaza-debris-May31

Palestinians carry some salvaged belongings as they leave the Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip on Friday. AFP

Mohammed Al Najjar, a 33-year-old Gazan, said on Saturday he was "shocked" and feeling "lost" as he returned home, only to find much of Jabalia refugee camp in ruins after an Israeli offensive

"All the houses have been reduced to rubble," Najjar told AFP in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip. "You are lost, you do not know where exactly your house is in the middle of this massive destruction."

Israeli forces carried out a massive bombardment campaign in Jabalia in recent weeks, part of a fierce ground offensive in northern Gaza — an area the military had previously said was out of the control of Hamas.

"I was shocked by the extent of the destruction in the latest aggression on Jabalia camp," said Najjar. In recent days, AFP correspondents have seen scores of Palestinians streaming into the area, trying to find their homes and salvage whatever belongings are left.

Gazakids-debris Palestinian children walk next to destroyed buildings in the Jabalia refugee camp. AFP

Men, women and children were walking through streets where their houses once stood, now full of grey concrete slabs.

Charred furniture, beds and mangled iron doors littered almost every street in the camp, an area once bustling with activity and home to more than 100,000 people, according to UN figures from before the war.

Many families carried their belongings on donkey carts, while others walked with beds and mattresses on their heads.

"We have no other place other than our homes," said Suad Abu Salah, 47, who has also returned after having fled the area earlier on in the Israel-Hamas war, now nearing its eighth month. But "Jabalia has been wiped off the map," she said.

'Stay on our land'

Despite the destruction, Najjar said people were "determined" to return to the neighbourhoods they had left to avoid the fighting.

Residents were willing to "set up tents and temporary shelters in the middle of the rubble", he said, even though "there's fear, fear that the (Israeli) occupation might come back." "But we will stay on our land. We have nowhere else."

On Friday the Israeli military announced it had completed its mission in eastern Jabalia, where it had previously said Hamas militants had regrouped.

On Saturday Jabalia residents said they could still hear constant gunfire and artillery shelling from the east.

Mahmud Assaliyah, 50, said "houses have been torn apart and entire apartment blocks have been completely destroyed in Jabalia."

"There's not a single house that has not been targeted by the Israeli occupation army." He has returned to find his house, too, had been flattened.

"Cement pillars have fallen, walls have been destroyed, furniture has been scattered, burnt down and torn apart," Assaliyah said.

Abu Salah said many residents are tired of being displaced and just want to stay put, whatever happens. "We want to live like other people in the world," she said. "We need a solution and an end to this war, so that we can live in peace."

Agence France-Presse

 

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