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Israeli military issues forced evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza

The IDF has issued a forced evacuation order to residents in parts of northern Gaza: Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-Zaatar.

Avichay Adraee, an Arabic language spokesperson for the Israeli army, said it is a “final” warning before the “raid”.

“We have warned about this area many times. For your safety, you must move immediately west to the known shelters in Gaza City,” he wrote in a post on X this morning.

A young girl holds a bag in the ruin of a house destroyed by an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.
A young girl holds a bag in the ruin of a house destroyed by an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters

It comes a day after the Israeli military ordered a sweeping evacuation order for the southern city of Rafah and parts of neighbouring Khan Younis – the biggest since the war resumed last month when Israel broke the ceasefire agreement with Hamas by launching a wave of airstrikes that killed hundreds of Palestinian people, including many women and children.

The IDF claims the evacuation orders are issued to protect Palestinian civilians from Hamas fighters who the Israeli military says are using civilians as human shields.

The UN has said the evacuations have failed to comply with the requirements of international law, as Israel is accused of failing to provide adequate health or safety conditions to civilians forced to flee.

Yesterday, residents in parts of southern Gaza were advised to leave immediately for the al-Mawasi “humanitarian zone”, a narrow strip of coastline at the southernmost end of the strip. But there have been many deadly Israeli airstrikes in the zone so there is no guarantee of safety there.

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Key events

The UN has said that 15 Palestinian paramedics and rescue workers, including at least one United Nations employee, were killed by Israeli forces “one by one” and buried in a mass grave just over a week ago in southern Gaza.

According to the UN humanitarian affairs office (Ocha), the Palestinian Red Crescent (PRCS) and civil defence workers were on a mission to rescue colleagues who had been shot at earlier in the day, when their clearly marked vehicles came under heavy Israeli fire in Rafah city’s Tel al-Sultan district.

As my colleagues report in this story, a Red Crescent official in Gaza said that there was evidence of at least one person being detained and killed, as the body of one of the dead had been found with his hands tied.

Bodies of Palestinian rescue workers recovered from mass grave – video

Israel’s military said its “initial assessment” of the incident had found that its troops had opened fire on several vehicles “advancing suspiciously toward IDF troops without headlights or emergency signals”.

The US, Israel’s staunchest ally and biggest weapons supplier, said it expects “all parties on the ground” in Gaza to comply with international humanitarian law, according to BBC News. This isn’t the first time Washington has said this.

In April 2024, for example, under former president Joe Biden, the state department said the US had “been clear at the highest levels publicly and privately with Israel that it must abide by international humanitarian law”.

Asked about the killings of the 15 people, state department spokesperson Tammy Bruce was quoted as having said: “Every single thing that happens in Gaza is happening because of Hamas”.

South Africa has brought a genocide case against Israel’s war in Gaza at the International Court of Justice.

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