Brits trying to flee Gaza turned away after Rafah crossing fails open
No escape: Desperate Brits trying to flee Gaza are turned away after Rafah crossing to Egypt fails to open, leaving hundreds of foreign nationals stranded
- Nearly 90 people with British passport requested to pass through Rafah crossing
The Foreign Office is pressing for a key border point in Gaza to be reopened to allow British nationals to leave the bombarded territory.
Almost 90 people with a British passport or UK travel documents had formally requested to pass through the Rafah crossing into Egypt yesterday, according to a list produced by the authorities running the border post.
But UK nationals found themselves turned away, with the crossing shut to foreign nationals over a reported row over evacuating injured patients.
It comes as it becomes increasingly difficult to find food in the beseiged strip as supermarkets shelves empty faster than the trickle of trucks carrying humanitarian aid through the southern Rafah crossing can fill them up.
The Rafah crossing is the only route out of the territory for foreign nationals and the sole entry point for incoming aid.
Almost 90 people with a British passport or UK travel documents had formally requested to pass through the Rafah crossing on Saturday into Egypt. Pictured:
But UK nationals found themselves turned away, with the crossing shut to foreign nationals over a reported row over evacuating injured patients. Pictured: People sit in the waiting area at the Rafah border crossing on November 1
It comes as it becomes increasingly difficult to find food in the beseiged strip as supermarkets shelves empty. Pictured: People walk through a gate to enter the Rafah border crossing to Egypt on November 1
The Rafah crossing is the only route out of the territory for foreign nationals and the sole entry point for incoming aid. Pictured: A satellite image shows a closer view of the Rafah border crossing
Zaynab Wandawi, 29, from Salford in Greater Manchester, and a group of 12 family members – 10 of whom are British nationals – were told they were on the list on Saturday, according to her mother, Lalah Ali-Faten.
READ MORE: Palestinians face starvation warns UN as shelves empty while Hamas say another 231 have been killed in past day by continuing Israeli airstrikes
But the English language teacher was turned away from the border due to disagreement between the Palestinian and Israeli authorities in control of the crossing, Ms Ali-Faten said.
Her daughter is trying to leave the enclave having travelled to Gaza at the beginning of October with her husband, who is British Palestinian, and his relatives for a family member’s wedding before the Israel-Hamas war erupted.
A spokesman for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said it was ‘disappointed’ that the vital border post had been ‘temporarily closed’.
‘This continues to be a complex and challenging situation and we are using all diplomatic channels to press for its reopening in co-ordination with our international partners,’ the spokesman said.
‘We remain in contact with British nationals in the region to provide them with the latest information.
‘It is vital that the safe passage of people, including all foreign nationals, and humanitarian aid can continue.’
At least 100 Britons, including the in-laws of Scotland’s First Minister Humza Yousaf, have left the besieged 25-mile strip using the Rafah crossing since it opened to foreign nationals last week.
A spokesman for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said it was ‘disappointed’ that the vital border post had been ‘temporarily closed’. Pictured: Egyptian Ambulance Organisation’s workers walk past parked ambulances near the Rafah border yesterday
At least 100 Britons, including the in-laws of Scotland’s First Minister Humza Yousaf, have left the besieged 25-mile strip using the Rafah crossing since it opened to foreign nationals last week. Pictured: People sit in the waiting area at the Rafah border crossing on November 1
Roughly 1,100 people have left the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing since Wednesday. Pictured: Palestinians with dual citizenship wait for permission to leave Gaza on November 2
But more are thought to want to exit, with around 200 in Gaza so far registering with the authorities.
Along with their dependents, the total number the UK is trying to secure passage for is thought to be in the low hundreds.
Roughly 1,100 people have left the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing since Wednesday under an apparent agreement among the United States, Egypt, Israel and Qatar, which mediates with Hamas.
Conditions in the war-torn enclave have become increasingly desperate as humanitarian aid struggles to supply the strip through the Rafah crossing.
A rising number of bakeries have also stopped operating due to the fuel and water shortages as well as airstrike damage.
Residents and officials have also complained that there’s not enough food coming through Rafah and much of it has already expired or will expire before it can reach people in need.
Wael Abu Omar, a spokesperson for the Rafah crossing, said that in recent days the trucks have contained far more body bags than canned food. He claimed that recently delivered biscuits had already expired and were inedible.
Lynn Hastings, a senior U.N. official based in Jerusalem, said she was aware of the reports of expired food but could not independently confirm them as the World Food Program’s food shipments of date bars wouldn’t expire for another month.
Conditions in the war-torn enclave have become increasingly desperate as humanitarian aid struggles to supply the strip through the Rafah crossing. Pictured: People unpack boxes of humanitarian aid in Gaza on November 2
A rising number of bakeries have also stopped operating due to the fuel and water shortages as well as airstrike damage. Pictured: A humanitarian aid convoy bound for the Gaza Strip crosses the Rafah border on November 2
The WFP has warned that widespread food insecurity across Gaza was quickly becoming a serious crisis.
READ MORE: Dramatic videos reveal intense battles raging between Israel and Hamas in war-torn Gaza with soldiers ambushed by terrorists armed with grenades emerging from tunnels
‘There is a real threat of malnutrition and people starving,’ said Alia Zaki, a spokesperson for the humanitarian organisation.
‘There is some food that’s still available but people can’t reach it. The situation is catastrophic.’
Fighting in the Middle East reignited after Hamas, a militant Palestinian group that rules the Gaza Strip, carried out an unprecedented attack on Israel, killing 1,400 people and taking about 240 hostages.
Tel Aviv’s retaliation, which has included a ground incursion into the territory, has killed more than 9,000 people, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.
The growing death toll since Hamas’s deadly raids on October 7 has sparked a host of protests in the UK, with thousands of pro-Palestinian supporters taking to the streets of London, Glasgow and Belfast on Saturday to demand a ceasefire.
The British Transport Police confirmed it was making inquiries into anti-Israel chanting on the tube network by demonstrators in the capital, with some protesters calling for revolution against Tel Aviv.
In one video highlighted to the Metropolitan Police on X, formerly known as Twitter, what appear to be pro-Palestinian supporters can be heard chanting: ‘Smash the Zionist settler state.’
Tel Aviv’s retaliation, which has included a ground incursion into the territory, has killed more than 9,000 people, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry. Pictured: People search through buildings that were destroyed during Israeli air raids in Khan Yunis on November 2
The growing death toll since Hamas’s deadly raids on October 7 has sparked a host of protests in the UK. Pictured: People search through buildings that were destroyed during Israeli air raids in the southern Gaza Strip November 4
A 24-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of a racially aggravated offence after footage was posted on social media which appeared to show a man praising Hamas, the Met said.
Hamas is proscribed as a terror organisation in the UK and support for it is banned.
The Met said a total of 29 people were arrested in London, including for inciting racial hatred, other racially motivated crimes, violence and assaulting a police officer.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman have expressed concern about the prospect of further pro-Palestine protests next Saturday, November 11, during Armistice Day.
Met Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley has promised to take a ‘robust approach’ and to use ‘all the powers available’ to ensure commemorative events are ‘not undermined’.
But demonstration organisers in London have pledged to avoid the Whitehall area where the Cenotaph war memorial – the focus of national remembrance events – is located.
The Palestine Solidarity Campaign is due to meet with the Met on Monday to discuss the operation and the potential route for next weekend’s demonstrations.
Mrs Braverman told Sky News that Armistice Day should be treated with the ‘solemnity with which it deserves’ as she raised concerns about some elements of the pro-Palestinian demonstrations turning into ‘hate marches’.
‘If anyone were to vandalise the Cenotaph, they must be put into a jail cell faster than their feet can touch the ground,’ she told the broadcaster during a visit to a Greek island on Saturday.
Elsewhere, Cabinet ministers have reportedly warned health bodies, charities and universities about a need to crack down on hate speech arising out of the Israel-Hamas conflict.
The Sunday Telegraph said, as part of the move, that Health Secretary Steve Barclay had written to the General Medical Council and Nursing and Midwifery Council warning that ‘hate speech and support for extremism or terrorism are not compatible’ with being a UK doctor or nurse.
The Department for Health and Social Care said it would not be commenting.
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