Israel seized control of the Rafah border crossing. The impact could be devastating
Primary Topic
This episode explores the severe consequences of Israel's military operation at the Rafah border crossing in Gaza, highlighting its implications on the local population and humanitarian conditions.
Episode Summary
Main Takeaways
- The Israeli military operation has significantly worsened the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, particularly in Rafah, affecting millions.
- A ceasefire proposal involving Egypt and Qatar was briefly celebrated by Gaza's residents but ultimately rejected by Israel, prolonging the conflict.
- The health system in Gaza is near collapse, with hospitals overwhelmed and basic medical supplies dwindling.
- The international community, including the U.S., has shown concern over the escalation, with some actions taken like pausing arms shipments to Israel.
- The episode highlights the resilience and suffering of Gaza's population amid ongoing military operations.
Episode Chapters
1. Introduction
Host Juana Summers introduces the episode's focus on the recent Israeli control over the Rafah border. Key insights include the dire warnings issued to Rafah's residents and the initial military actions. Juana Summers: "On Monday, leaflets fell from the sky in southern Gaza."
2. The Humanitarian Impact
Discussion on the deteriorating humanitarian conditions in Rafah, including health, shelter, and basic supplies. Abdelwah Habhamad: "It's a city of tents. It's a city of children."
3. Political and Military Developments
Covers the geopolitical dynamics, including failed ceasefire negotiations and the potential for further conflict escalation. Juana Summers: "Israel's government did not accept the ceasefire proposal."
4. International Response and Implications
Examines global reactions to the crisis, including measures taken by the U.S. and other international actors. Aya Batrawi: "NPR has confirmed reporting in Axios that the White House paused an armed shipment to Israel."
Actionable Advice
- Stay informed on global conflicts to better understand their humanitarian impacts.
- Support credible NGOs providing aid in conflict zones.
- Advocate for peaceful resolutions and engage in community discussions on international policies.
- Educate others about the complexities of geopolitical conflicts to foster a more informed public.
- Participate in or organize fundraisers to support humanitarian efforts in crisis-affected areas.
About This Episode
The Biden administration has put a hold on an arms shipment to Israel. A senior administration official speaking on the condition of anonymity told NPR it was due to concerns the bombs could be used in Rafah.
Rafah is the site of Israel's latest campaign in its war against Hamas. It's also home to some 1.3 million Palestinians. More than half of those people have fled fighting in other parts of Gaza.
On Monday night, Israeli tanks rolled into Rafah taking control of the Palestinian side of the border crossing with Egypt.
The seizure of the border crossing cuts a key supply line for humanitarian aid.
Israel says its incursion in Rafah is a "precise counterterrorism operation." But possible further military action along with the closed border crossing could exacerbate a humanitarian catastrophe.
People
Juana Summers, Abdelwah Habhamad, Aya Batrawi
Content Warnings:
Graphic scenes of violence
Transcript
Juana Summers
On Monday, leaflets fell from the sky in southern Gaza. They were dropped by israeli forces, and they told residents in parts of Rafa that they should evacuate some 100,000 people. They were directed to a, quote, expanded humanitarian area north and northwest of the city. To many people in Rafa, that concept is meaningless. There are no safe spaces in Gaza.
Abdelwah Habhamad works for a community development organization in Gaza. He spoke to us this week from Rafa. The concept of safe designated area has become illusive for the people of Gaza. It is illusion because it has just been shattered. We speak about 1.3 million Palestinians living in a place smaller than Hitu airport.
Abdelwah Habhamad
It is the last remaining sanctuary in Gaza, the last refuge. And by the way, there is no refuge. Monday night, tanks rolled into Rafa, taking control of the palestinian side of the border crossing with Egypt. Israeli airstrikes had already been pounding the city for weeks, killing hundreds since late March, most of them women and children. According to hospital records, there are at least 1.3 million Palestinians living in Rafa.
Juana Summers
More than half fled fighting in other parts of Gaza, including Hamad. I'm from northern part of Gaza. I live in the north, and I have been displaced six times now. This is going to be my 7th if I evacuated Rafa. He now lives in a refugee camp in Rafa.
He says what's happening there is somehow more than a humanitarian crisis. There's not enough food and close to no clean water. 90% of Gaza's health system has collapsed. Diseases are on the rise, particularly malaria. Now we have more than 600,000 children in tents.
Abdelwah Habhamad
It's a city of tent. It's a city of children. Hamad said that people are ravenous for life, even just normal life. And for a brief moment earlier this week, people in Rafah were actually celebrating. Hamas announced it had agreed to terms of a ceasefire proposed by Egypt and Qatar.
The moment I heard that they're kind of reaching a deal, I was super happy. I kind of celebrated. I personally have bought sweets like dessert. But then in a one night shift, you know, it was, it is hilarious, ridiculous. It's just like a dream.
Juana Summers
Israel's government did not accept the ceasefire proposal, but sent a diplomatic delegation to Egypt to continue negotiations. Consider this. Israel says its incursion in Rafa is a precise counterterrorism operation, but possible further military action along with the closed border crossing could exacerbate a humanitarian catastrophe.
From NPR, I'm Juana Summers. It's consider this from NPR. One of the questions hanging over Israel's operation in Rafa is where is President Biden's red line? There's the line that his national security spokesman, John Kirby, used again in Rafa. That put these people at greater risk.
And again, we've been very clear that. We don't support a major ground operation in Rafa operations. And again, I'll just go back to what I've said. I don't know, half a dozen, if not more times today. We don't support operations in Rafa that put people at greater risk.
That was all. At a press briefing on Monday before Israel's incursion in Rafa after its forces took over the border crossing, Kirby said it did not constitute a major ground invasion. The Israelis have said this operation they conducted last night was of limited duration in size and scale and scope, limited purpose. What I've said is we've heard that and we're watching. We're monitoring.
There was one notable development in Biden's relationship with Israel. NPR has confirmed, reporting in axios that the White House paused an armed shipment to Israel. A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told NPR it was due to concerns that the bombs could be used in Rafa.
Whether or not Israel's operation in Arafa currently constitutes a major ground offensive, the evacuation is worsening, a desperate situation for people living there. NPR international correspondent Aya Batrawi has been following the story, and she joins me now from Dubai. Hi. Hey. So, ea, we know that Rafa is where more than half of Gaza's population has been sheltering and that it's where Israel launched a ground operation on Monday.
Terry says that at this stage, troops are not advancing towards the main city and that they're focused on the eastern part of Rafa. But with israeli tanks now in parts of Rafa, what has the impact been there? Well, Rafa has a really small area bordering Egypt, but it's become home to more than 1.4 million displaced people, half of whom are children. So this military offensive has jolted and terrified people there. They're really concerned that this operation is just beginning and will expand.
Aya Batrawi
Have a listen to israeli government spokesman Abi Hyman explaining Israel's military goals in Rafa. This is the beginning of our mission to take out the last four Hamas brigades in Rafah. You should be in no doubt about that whatsoever. You spoke today with aid workers in Rafa. Let's have a listening to your reporting with NPR producer Anis Baba in Gaza about what's happening on the ground there.
Juana Summers
And I'll warn listeners here that this report includes the sound of gunfire as well as graphic scenes of violence. Since the October 7 attack on Israel, people in Gaza have had to pick up and move again and again and again.
Aya Batrawi
The beach road to the schools, Tel Shefa hospital to El Shawa, to Rafah. Fatma Bella rattles off the places she's been forced to flee. We've seen nothing but suffering, says the elderly woman who walks with a cane. On Monday, she was among the more than 100,000 people in eastern Rafah. Israel told to leave children piled onto donkey carts and in cars stacked high with mattresses.
But most people had to walk through streets overflowing with sewage and garbage as they dragged the luggage and pushed the wounded in wheelchairs. Israel sent messages like this to get people moving.
Israel also published a grid like map with the numbered blocks of where people should leave on social media and in flyers drop from the sky for your safety, the israeli military orders you to evacuate immediately to the expanded humanitarian area in el Mawasi, the message says. But it warns people not to head back too far north, where israeli forces have shot people trying to reach Gaza city. Less than 24 hours later, israeli tanks rolled into Rafah.
In one viral video, a tank is seen rolling over an I love Gaza sign near the Rafah crossing with Egypt. The military says troops killed Hamas gunmen in that area and found tunnel shafts. The operation, however, also shut down the Rafah border, the main artery for fuel and aid and anyone entering or leaving Gaza. Jens Larke, spokesman for the UN humanitarian. Office, if no fuel comes in for a prolonged period of time, it would be a very effective way of putting the humanitarian operation in its grave.
Hisham Mahanna is in Rafah with the international committee of the Red Cross. He says severely wounded and chronically ill people are trapped and the health system has collapsed. This is why a significant military operation in Rafael can be disastrous and will lead to absolute carnage. The UN estimates that tens of thousands fled the city on Tuesday. Some headed to the scorching Sandy area of El Moassi, others to central Gaza.
Both areas have been bombed. Doctor James Smith, an emergency doctor in Rafah, says not everyone can leave the city, particularly those who are ill or wounded. But people who stay will struggle to find treatment. The european Gaza hospital, which is to the northeast of Rafa, is completely, completely overwhelmed already. Several of the smaller hospitals in Rafa have already started to preemptively evacuate patients because they're fearful of what the israeli military might do in or around those health facilities.
Rafah's main hospital was closed. It's in the red zone, where people were told to leave. Doctors Without Borders emergency coordinator in Gaza, Sylvain Gru says another hospital in Rafa is already moving its incubators and equipment to Nasser hospital in nearby Hanyunes, which they're trying to salvage after an israeli raid destroyed it. As for hanyunes, the city has been completely destroyed. It looks like World War two, and I've never seen this level of damage, even in places like Mosul or Aleppo.
Although the city is more devastated than any he's seen in Iraq and Syria. He says this offensive is moving very, very quickly. Time is not on our side. Just as people were leaving Rafah this week, israeli airstrikes killed at least 13 members of the al Darbi family, sheltering in a home in an area not under evacuation orders. The body bags are baking in the heat under the sun.
Rafah's key morgue isn't accessible. It's part of the main hospital in the red zone. Amal ad Derbi, a matriarch in the family names off the men, women and children lying in those body bags are still under the rubble.
They were innocent kids, just kids, she says.
At the site of the airstrike, rescue workers comb through the rubble using only shovels.
Civil defense worker Mohammed al Homs is helping, but he says, should I console myself or others? He says only yesterday his uncle, his uncle's wife and their three children were killed in an israeli airstrike. But, he adds, there's no time to grieve. That was NPR's Eya Batrawi with rapport reporting from Anas Baba and Rafa. This episode was produced by Jordan Marie Smith, Lena Mohammed and Conor Donovan.
Juana Summers
It was edited by Courtney Dorning and James Heider. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun. And one more thing before we go. Consider this is now also a newsletter. Just like on this podcast, we help you break down a major story of the day.
But you'll also get to know our producers and hosts, and we'll share moments of joy from the ALL THINGS considered team. You can sign up@npr.org consider this newsletter.
It's Consider this from NPR. I'm Juana Summers.