TEL AVIV — Women, children and the elderly are among the thousands of displaced people living in a huge tent city sprawled across the desert in southern Gaza.
Some live in unfinished concrete structures, others are sheltering under plastic sheets and tents. Laundry is done in buckets. Cooking, outside on makeshift, wood-fired metal stoves.
Many walked miles to get to the camp on the outskirts of the city of Rafah, the blisters on their feet still visible from perilous journeys amid regular Israeli bombardment, the trauma etched on their faces.
The Israeli military says they should be safe here, but while many still fear air attacks, the lack of food, clean drinking water and medication as winter sets in could also prove deadly.
Fifteen-year-old Rohifa Ramza Baker told an NBC News crew earlier this week that she wondered whether it would be better “for me to die here instead of living this black life.”
“This is our life. We are living in a tent at the Egyptian border,” she said. “May God help us. May God help us.”
Baker is among around 1.9 million people — roughly 90% of the Gaza population — who have been displaced since Israel launched its air and ground offensive on Gaza, according to United Nations officials.
The military campaign, during which Israel says 115 soldiers have died, came after Hamas militants killed 1,200 people and seized about 240 hostages on Oct. 7, according to Israeli officials. More than 100 remain in captivity, they have said.
Health officials in Gaza say more than 18,400 Palestinians have been killed in the conflict, two-thirds of them women and children.
‘We don’t have shelter’
Aid into the besieged enclave has largely stopped, with only limited distributions trickling into Rafah, according to the U.N., which estimates that around half of Gaza’s 2.2 million people face starvation.
In a statement Tuesday, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the lack of aid was largely due to the…
Read the full article here