Gaza City, Israeli Lies

By Dr Marwan Asmar

The current Israeli military onslaught on Gaza is so fierce that hundreds of thousands of Palestinian have already left the downtrodden city. It is a ramshackle place that is once again becoming a ghost town of debris as once-plush residential towers are now beaten down by Israeli bombs with the stench of gun-powder and sick human flesh that lies hidden below the rubble.

Israel’s latest attempt to invade Gaza City started on 16 September, 2025 and since then it has been bombing the once-dazzling urban conurbation from the air, land, and sea, causing widespread destruction and significant civilian casualties, whilst creating yet another mad wave of displacement to the south of the Strip.

Figures of forced displacement are not precise but the city a, conglomerate of 1.3 million people, has been reduced by much less. The Israeli army likes to boost of its handiwork. After the first week of ariel bombardment, it said 40 percent of the population has left, and today it says that 450,000 people have gone. The Gaza Media Office puts the number at only 270,000.

Despite the Israeli leaflets dropped from the air telling people to leave Palestinian sources still say that around 900,000 are staying put. Many say they are not going anywhere because of the limited space down in the south, and the fact it costs $3000 dollars to get down there, something which they don’t have.

One put it bluntly and callously, accepting fate as it comes. “Since, we are going to die anyway through Israeli bombs, it’s better to die here,” he added. The acceptance of fate however may be related to the fact that some of the people may have moved up to 20 times since the war started on Gaza soon after 7 October, 2023.  

Last Thursday, World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the Israeli assault, currently centred on Gaza City, is “driving new waves of displacement, forcing traumatised families into an ever-shrinking area unfit for human dignity”.

“The injured and people with disabilities cannot move to safety, which puts their lives in grave danger,” Tedros said. “We call for an immediate end to these inhumane conditions. “We call for an immediate end to these inhumane conditions. We call for a ceasefire.”

Case stories of thick swarves of displaced people speak of hellish conditions as they can be seen on the Al Rasheed Road connecting the north of the Gaza Strip to its southern side. If people can afford they can use transport but many, including whole families of men, women and children  are moving on foot, hungry, with no water and many collapsing on the road as some have been moving for hours on end. For night rest, they make do with resting their limbs, again with no food on the sides of the road.

The social media have been rife with stories about forcibly displaced Palestinians on the road. Many of them say they don’t know where they are going, although the end of the road is to Al Mowasi, an area to the southwest of Khan Younis and which the Israeli has designated as a “safe” place but which it keeps bombing from the air whenever it feels like it.

One elderly man called Abu Nader Siam, walks slowly holding a cane in his right hand with his wife, Zakia Siam, at his left.  He is exhausted as reported in the UN News.

“I come from the Tal al-Hawa neighborhood in Gaza City. They [Israelis] have left no house or neighbourhood except to bomb it,” he said. “The shelling continues, and they have dropped leaflets ordering us to evacuate. We walked for six hours because we couldn’t find a car or any transportation.”

Zakia Siam spoke about their non-stop journey after the shelling reduced their house to rubble. “We went to the Shujaiya neighbourhood, and then we were displaced to the Sha’af neighbourhood in Gaza City before it was bombed,” his wife said. 

“Afterwards, we went to the seashore west of Gaza City and my husband and I stayed there for two nights without a tent. We sat on the sidewalk next to the tents and hid next to one of them, then continued walking.”

Another civilian, Mrs. Um Shadi al-Ashkar, carried a bag of belongings as she headed for southern Gaza.  “There is death, shelling, bombing and destruction of houses (in Gaza City),” she said.

“Even if they had dropped leaflets, if there had been no shelling, no one would have left Gaza City, they would have stayed in their homes. But there is death and devastation.”

The fight for Gaza city is in full-swing. The Israeli army knows what its up against, adding it could take months, or even up to a year to completely take over the city from Palestinian resistance groups. Meanwhile, they know the city is a Hamas stronghold which they can’t railroad through their tanks. That is why for the time being they put the ground invasion on hold and bombing the city from the air and sea.

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Israel Bombs Sanaa Airport While WHO Chief Prepares to Leave

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, World Health Organization (WHO) said, Thursday, said he was at Yemen’s Sanaa airport when it was hit by Israeli air strikes.

“As we were about to board our flight from Sana’a, about two hours ago, the airport came under aerial bombardment. One of our plane’s crew members was injured,” Tedros wrote on his X account. “At least two people were reported killed at the airport.”

“The air traffic control tower, the departure lounge — just a few meters from where we were — and the runway were damaged,” he said, adding that the mission needs to wait for the damage to the airport to be repaired before they can leave.

Tedros said he and his colleagues are safe and sent “heartfelt condolences” to the relatives of those who lost their lives in the attack.

The WHO chief and his team were in Yemen to negotiate the release of UN staff detainees and assess the country’s health and humanitarian situation.

“We continue to call for the detainees’ immediate release,” he added according to Anadolu.

Houthi Foreign Minister Jamal Amer condemned on his X account the timing of the Israeli airstrike on the airport.

He described the attack as “targeting and disregarding the UN,” as it coincided with preparations for Tedros and UN resident coordinator Julian Harnis to depart on a UN flight.

The Houthi-affiliated Al-Masirah channel said fatalities in the airport’s attack rose to three with 16 injuries, while Israel struck the Ras Isa oil port in Al-Hudaydah which resulted in one death while three people went missing.

Israeli warplanes launched a new wave of airstrikes in Yemen targeting several strategic sites, including Sanaa airport and the port of Al-Hudaydah in western Yemen, Israeli public broadcaster KAN said.

Israel’s Channel 12 said power stations were targeted in the attacks, without providing further details.

According to Israeli Channel 13, dozens of Israeli fighter jets took part in the attacks, which coincided with a televised speech by Houthi leader Abdel-Malik al-Houthi.

KAN said the US was notified before the launch of the attacks.

Channel 14 claimed that critical targets such as air traffic control towers and runways at Sanaa airport were destroyed, alongside Al Hudaydah port, allegedly a hub for arms smuggling to the Houthis.

Senior Israeli security officials, cited by the channel, suggested the strikes could mark the beginning of a broader campaign. They indicated Israel might continue targeting the Houthis as long as the group persists in launching attacks against Israeli cities.

The latest strikes are part of a pattern of Israeli military action in Yemen this year. On 20 July, Israeli airstrikes on Al Hudaydah Port are said to have killed dozens and caused significant material losses, estimated by Houthi officials at $20 million.

On 29 September, Israeli forces conducted widespread airstrikes on western Yemen, including Al Hudaydah and Ras Isa ports.

Most recently, on 19 December, Israel targeted power stations in Sana’a, Al Hudaydah, Salif, and Ras Isa, resulting in nine deaths, three injuries, and severe infrastructure damage. The strikes left hundreds of thousands without electricity.

Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth revealed ongoing discussions with the US about the possibility of a major offensive in Yemen. The report said Israel views the Houthis as a resilient adversary with strong morale and widespread support across Arab populations.

The newspaper speculated on the potential for a radical shift in Israeli strategy, possibly involving international ground operations to oust the Houthis. However, such efforts may depend on a change in US leadership, with Israeli officials expressing hope for a tougher stance under a potential Trump administration in 2025.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned the Houthis, Wednesday, saying: “They will learn the same lessons as Hamas, Hezbollah, the Assad regime, and others, even if it takes time.”

The Houthis have targeted Israel, as well as Israeli-linked shipping and naval vessels in the Red Sea, in solidarity with the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip, where Israel has killed more than 45,000 people since the 7 October, 2023 Hamas attacks.

The US and UK have also been bombing Houthi targets in Yemen.

​​​​​​​Netanyahu, Thursday, visited the Air Force command and control center to monitor the attack, his office said, confirming the attack according to the Turkish news agency.

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Mindless Israel Bans UNRWA in Palestine

The WHO chief has warned that the Israeli ban against the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) will have “devastating consequences” as the agency is an “irreplaceable lifeline.”

“UNRWA is an irreplaceable lifeline to the Palestinian people. And it has been for the past seven decades,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said late Monday on X.

“Today’s decision by the Israeli parliament barring UNRWA from its life-saving and health-protecting work on behalf of millions of Palestinians will have devastating consequences. This is intolerable,” Tedros said according to Anadolu.

He stressed that it contravenes Israel’s obligations and responsibilities, and threatens the lives and health of all those who depend on UNRWA.

Despite objections from around the world, Israeli lawmakers passed on Monday the bill 92-10, banning UNRWA from working in Israel and occupied territories.

Israel has accused UNRWA employees of complicity in the Oct. 7, 2023 cross-border incursion by Hamas. UNRWA, however, denies the accusations.

Since then, Israel has killed more than 43,000 people in Gaza and created famine-like conditions across the blockaded territory.

The law, to take effect within three months, would end contact between UNRWA and Israeli officials, preventing the agency from providing life-saving support to Palestinians across Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

The agency was established by the General Assembly in December 1949 to carry out relief and works programs for Palestine refugees. It began its operations on May 1, 1950.​​​​​​​

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