3:10 p.m. ET, February 9, 2024
Here’s the key things to know after Netanyahu asks for plan to evacuate civilians from Rafah
From CNN staff
In the statement, his office said that it was not possible to both eliminate Hamas and leave “four Hamas battalions in Rafah.”
Here’s what you need to about this and other developments in the Israel-Hamas war:
Where will the civilians go?: Rafah is the last major population center in Gaza not occupied by the Israel Defense Forces and it has rapidly become home to a
huge population of displaced Palestinians. Satellite images showed this week how a tent city has swelled in size in just a few weeks. CNN has also
previously reported on Palestinian civilians who followed evacuation orders being killed by Israeli strikes, underscoring the reality that evacuation zones and warning alerts from the Israeli military haven’t guaranteed safety for civilians in the densely populated Gaza Strip, where Palestinians have no safe place to escape Israeli bombs.
Here’s what the United States has said: “To conduct such an operation right now with no planning and little thought in an area where there is sheltering of a million people would be a disaster,” Deputy State Department Spokesperson Vedant Patel told a news briefing Thursday. Also, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken raised concerns about the expansion into Rafah during meetings with Netanyahu and other Israeli officials this week, two Israeli officials told CNN on Wednesday.
Non-governmental organizations issue warnings: Several non-governmental organizations have warned about the humanitarian consequences of Israeli operations in Rafah. For instance, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) said the city, which borders Egypt, could soon turn “into a zone of bloodshed and destruction that people won’t be able to escape.”
Hostage families frustrated: With hopes for a new
deal to return Israeli hostages from Gaza in doubt, many, including the families of those hostages still held by Hamas,
have directed their anger at Netanyahu, who dismissed the terms of a ceasefire and hostage deal put forward by Hamas.
Half of UNRWA requests to deliver aid in Gaza denied: The UN’s main relief agency in Gaza said Friday that half of its aid mission requests to deliver aid in Gaza since the beginning of the year
have been denied. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) has not been able to deliver aid in Gaza since January 23, agency Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini said on
X, adding that people in the territory are on the verge of famine.