Palestinians face the struggle to survive in Gaza or for Israel forcing them | Israel-Palestine News of Conflict

Deir el-Balah, a gauze bar, Palestine- Listening to the radio a few days ago outside the tent who must now call home, 77-year-old Mohammed al-Nabahin heard of the Israeli plan for establishing a “Voluntary” migration office For Palestinians in Gaza.
The news report was given by Al-Nabah’s details. The agency planned by Israeli Defense Minister, Israel Katz, and approved the cabinet. His goal was to organize and secure the exit of Palestinians “who want to migrate to third countries. Palestinians who return to their original villages in the historic Palestine are not mentioned.
The plan follows some Similar proposals US President Donald Trump earlier this year.
“The idea is out of the question,” Mohammed Ravno said.
“If they want to voluntarily move us, let us return to our countries in occupied Palestine, from which they expel us!” Said Al Jazeera. “Why should we leave our country?”
Mohammed had already experienced that he was forced from his home.
When the Israeli genocidal war in Gaza began 17 months ago, Mohammed was forced to escape and leave his home in central Gaza.
He still thinks that life in a tent in the gauze is better than leaving.
“All my children agree with me. Everyone is against leaving Gaza, no matter what’s going on,” Mohammed said.
Waiting for death
In the tent opposite, 47-year-old Salwa al-Masri prepares food for her family, cheering on a wooden fire to continue her.
Divides Mohammed’s contempt for the idea of leaving Gaza.
Her fights at war are the same as many others in Gaza. Forced to dispute, it is barely able to find enough food to eat his family because Israel has decided to block the entry of goods into Gaza.
It must rely on feeding for edible plants like Mallow and spinach, which become wild nearby. Hunger, along with Israel bombs, left “waiting for death.”
But for Salwa, it’s a very suffering that means he can’t stand the idea of going.
“We endured it all just to leave? That will never happen,” she said.
“We lost everything. I lost my whole home in Beit Hanoun [in northern Gaza]And I decided to live the rest of my life as a displaced person in the south, maintaining difficulty and hunger, but I won’t leave, “she added.
Salwa believes that Israel uses bombing attacks and starvation to press people to leave, waiting for despair to build before it offers “output options”.
“Where would we go, wandering foreign countries? Why is every option available except we stay?” She added.
Israel recently killed all eight children of Salwe’s sister on strike on Beit Hanoun.
“Do you think my sister, after such a loss, would decide to leave? Of course not,” she said.
Desperately to leave
Israeli attempts to leave the Palestinians to leave the human rights organization as an attempt by ethnic cleansing of the territory.
Palestinians already have a long experience of displacement in the hands of Israel, starting in 1948. 750,000 Palestinians ethnically cleared of their homes and villages from Zionist militia to declare the place of the state of Israel.
Ethnic cleansing has repeatedly been raised during the Israeli war against Gaza, under various forms – many Israelites see this as the goal of the war, hoping to expand their cleaning to turn on the occupied West Coast.
The Israeli war against Gaza killed more than 50,000 Palestinians, and without an end in sight, Israel is betting that thousands of Palestinians will desperately go to leave, even if they cannot return.
And in Gaza, while many older Palestinians are determined to stay, many from the younger generations do not see the future for themselves in the enclave.
On the street corner, the 25-year-old Mahmoud al-Rai fixes the kyclicist tire in a small improvised workshop.
When he told about a migration agency, which he had not heard of, Mahmoud replied with a wide smile, “Where to apply?”
“I want to leave Gaza as soon as possible,” he told Al Jazeera. “We are exhausted by wars – no human being can withstand what we go here. It seems that there is no end of this war and his tragedies. Every minute we live here like dying.”
Mahmoud said he didn’t care where he was going, and he didn’t care that Israel would make her way easier.
He added that he was not alone – many of his friends and peers share his desire to permanently leave Gaza.
“We all see that we have no future here. There is no life, without work, education – only destruction, wars and bloodshed,” said the young man, who helps support his 10 -year -old family, including his parents.
“Just open the migration transitions and see how many people, especially young people, will leave Gaza immediately.”