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Gaza truce talks end inconclusively as Rafah braces for Israeli assault

  • South Africa asked the World Court to consider whether Israel’s plan to extend its offensive into the city required additional emergency measures
  • Calls are growing for Israel to hold back on its Rafah assault, with aid agencies saying the displaced have nowhere else to go

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Palestinian children wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, on Tuesday. Photo: Reuters

Talks involving the US, Egypt, Israel and Qatar on a Gaza truce ended without a breakthrough on Tuesday as calls grew for Israel to hold back on a planned assault on the southern end of the enclave, crammed with over a million displaced people.

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The city of Rafah, whose pre-war population was about 300,000, teems with homeless people living in tent camps and makeshift shelters who fled there from Israeli bombardments in areas of Gaza further north during more than four months of war.

Israel says it wants to flush out Hamas militants from hideouts in Rafah and free Israeli hostages being held there, and is making plans to evacuate trapped Palestinian civilians. But no plan has been forthcoming and aid agencies say the displaced have nowhere else to go in the shattered territory.

Israeli tanks shelled the eastern sector of Rafah overnight, causing waves of panic, residents said. They said displaced people – dozens so far – had begun to leave Rafah after Israeli shelling and air strikes in recent days.

Palestinians leave Rafah on Tuesday in fear of an Israeli military operation. Photo: Reuters
Palestinians leave Rafah on Tuesday in fear of an Israeli military operation. Photo: Reuters

“I fled Al-Maghazi, came to Rafah, and here I am, returning to Al-Maghazi,” said Nahla Jarwan, referring to the coastal refugee camp from which she fled earlier in the conflict.

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