Benjamin Netanyahu postponed the operation to attack Rafah
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu postponed the ground attack operation on Rafah, where Palestinians took refuge. The decision was announced on Israeli state television.
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It was claimed that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu postponed the land attack on Rafah, where displaced Palestinians took shelter in the Gaza Strip.
In the news on Israeli state television KAN, it was claimed that Netanyahu, who said last week that “the date was determined” for the land attack on Rafah, “postponed” this step.
The news did not provide any information about why or until when Netanyahu postponed the land attack on Rafah.
In his statement on April 8, Netanyahu said that “the date has been determined” for the land attack on Rafah, where approximately 1.5 million Palestinians took refuge.
Rafah, where displaced Palestinians took refuge
The city of Rafah, located south of Gaza on the Egyptian border, was home to approximately 280 thousand Palestinians before the Israeli attacks. Due to Israel’s attacks on October 7, 1.9 million people were displaced in the Gaza Strip, which has a population of 2.3 million.
Most of the displaced Palestinians took refuge in Rafah, which Israel had previously claimed was “safe”. With the arrivals from the northern regions, the population of Rafah more than quadrupled, reaching 1.5 million.
Most of the Palestinians who took refuge in Rafah due to lack of sufficient housing are struggling to survive in camps consisting of makeshift tents.
The Israeli army targets the city of Rafah with frequent air strikes. It is feared that if Israel launches a land attack on the city of Rafah, civilians will have no shelter in the Gaza Strip.
On February 9, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed the Israeli army and security services to “prepare a plan to attack Rafah.”
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