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The Political Chessboard: Israel, Egypt, Hamas, and International Powers

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Although Gaza is still under a so-called “ceasefire”, nothing about Gaza feels like peace. The bombs are quieter, yet the pressure is heavier. Resultantly, the Rafah border remains a battleground without bullets, shaped by political deals, blocked negotiations, and shifting alliances. In a series of events, every country involved says it wants stability, while none of them agree on what that stability should look like. However, Palestinians are not invited into the rooms where their future is being discussed.

This is the political chessboard of Gaza. In fact, a map of power where every move is made above the heads of the people who live with the consequences.

Israel’s Strategy: Control Without Responsibility

Israel’s long-term goal has become increasingly clear. It is to maintain control over Gaza’s borders, movement, and political structure while avoiding the burden of direct governance. The reopening of the Rafah crossing only for exit, not entry, is part of this design. A one-way gate would encourage Palestinian displacement without Israel having to declare it openly.

Reports published by international outlets reveal proposals that would place Gaza under a new administrative framework that excludes Palestinian political actors and leaves Israel with indirect control.

Inside Israel, political pressure from far-right ministers shapes much of its Gaza policy. They demand harsher restrictions, deeper buffer zones, and tighter control of who enters and exits the strip. The argument is always the same: “security.” The reality is more aligned with demographic engineering and territorial fragmentation.

Egypt’s Red Line: No Resettlement in Sinai

Egypt rejects any attempt to push Palestinians into Sinai. Cairo has repeated this stance publicly and privately, warning that any forced movement of Gazans into Egyptian territory would destabilize the region and undermine Egypt’s sovereignty.

Egyptian officials understand that once Palestinians cross into Sinai in large numbers, they may never return. Egypt refuses to become the “alternative homeland.” This is why the Rafah crossing remains tightly controlled from the Egyptian side as well. Egypt views the crossing as leverage, a card it will not surrender lightly.

Hamas: Squeezed but Not Erased

Two years of war have left Hamas militarily weakened and politically isolated. Large parts of its governance structure were destroyed, and the population it once administered is now scattered across tent camps and ruined cities.

Yet Hamas remains a key player because it holds the hostage file and still commands loyalty among the masses. Attempts by Israel, the U.S., and other regional actors to design Gaza’s political future without Hamas have created a vacuum. There is no clear replacement, no unified Palestinian authority ready to take control, and no roadmap that includes the people who live in Gaza.

The United States: Containing the Conflict, Not Resolving It

The United States frames its Gaza involvement as a humanitarian and diplomatic effort. However, its strategy is aimed at managing the conflict, not ending it.

Washington continues military support to Israel while pushing for a Gaza administration that minimizes Hamas’s influence. The U.S.-backed idea of a “Board of Peace” or international governance model places foreign powers over Palestinian territory, effectively sidelining Palestinian representation.

This contradiction, supporting Israel militarily while calling for humanitarian relief, has shaped U.S. policy since the first days of the war. It has also prevented any long-term political solution from taking shape.

Qatar: The Broker Between Opposites

Qatar plays a unique role on this chessboard. It mediates hostage exchanges, communicates with Hamas, and finances humanitarian operations. Israel criticizes Qatar, yet depends on it. The U.S. works through Qatar despite political discomfort, and Hamas relies on Qatar’s mediation to remain relevant.

In every negotiation since 2023, Qatar has been the only actor able to speak to all sides. Its influence comes not from military power, but from its ability to keep channels open when everyone else closes theirs.

Europe: Loud Words, Quiet Actions

European governments issue statements condemning civilian suffering, demanding accountability, and calling for more aid. However, Europe remains deeply divided.

Countries like Spain, Belgium, and Ireland push for stronger action. Others, including France and Germany, avoid measures that would pressure Israel. The EU’s economic partnerships with Israel remain intact. Security cooperation continues, and statements do not become consequences.

As a result, Europe’s diplomatic voice carries moral weight but limited political impact.

The Broader Arab World: Anger Without Strategy

Arab leaders face enormous public pressure to act for Gaza, but their responses have been largely symbolic. Economic agreements, security deals, and regional partnerships constrain stronger positions.

Saudi Arabia remains cautious as it balances global alliances. The UAE prioritizes economic stability. Jordan manages population pressure and border security. None of these states has presented a unified plan for Gaza’s future. The absence of an Arab strategy leaves the political field open for external powers.

Rafah: A Border Crossing That Reveals Everything

The Rafah crossing is not just a gate, but the clearest symbol of Gaza’s political reality.

  • Israel wants it controlled in a way that encourages displacement.
  • Egypt refuses to open it for mass entry.
  • The U.S. wants a managed framework.
  • Qatar uses it as a negotiation point.
  • Hamas sees it as a lifeline.

And Palestinians see it as the difference between survival and suffocation. Every decision about Rafah is a political move in this larger chess game.

A Homeland Negotiated Without Its People

Gaza’s political future is being shaped in Washington, Cairo, Tel Aviv, Doha, Brussels, and Riyadh. But neither in Gaza City nor in Rafah. Palestinians have no seat at the table where their homeland is being redesigned.

This is the real tragedy of Gaza’s political crisis. Occupation continues not only through military force, but through diplomatic exclusion. Every foreign plan that excludes Palestinian voices deepens instability and prolongs suffering.

The world cannot speak of stability while silencing the people who live with the consequences.

Until Palestinians are central to decisions about their land, every negotiation, border reopening, governance proposal, or ceasefire will be nothing more than another move in a game they never agreed to play.

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Gaza Death Toll Passes 70,000: What This Number Really Hides

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Gaza’s recorded death toll has crossed 70,000, but this news vanished quickly from global headlines. No outrage, calls for accountability, or urgent meetings. Undoubtedly, it is just another statistic in a world that has grown disturbingly comfortable with Gaza’s suffering.

However, this enormous figure hides more than it reveals. It captures only the bodies that reached hospitals, only the victims who could be counted, and only the dead whose names still had someone left alive to write them down. Shockingly, the real number of Palestinians killed over the past two years is far higher and far more devastating.

More Than a Number

The 70,000 deaths reported by Gaza’s Ministry of Health reflect what medical teams managed to document. This documentation was done amid bombed hospitals, collapsed neighbourhoods, and suffocating siege conditions. In fact, many clinics can no longer report data at all. Communication networks fail for weeks, ambulances run without fuel and there is no unified system left to track the dead.

Officials inside Gaza quietly admit that thousands more remain uncounted, and several people are still missing. Entire families are gone and erased in silence, while their bodies never reach hospitals, nor do they appear on any list.

Buried Under Rubble

Many neighbourhoods hit in the early months of the war were never cleared. Without heavy machinery and fuel, Gaza’s civil defence teams could not remove collapsed buildings. Months later, people still report the smell of bodies beneath the concrete. Parents search for children, and siblings look for brothers and sisters. Some families wander through ruins hoping for a sign, a scrap of clothing, anything.

When a whole household is killed, no one remains to report them missing. Those deaths are often omitted from charts, reports, and official statements. They become invisible casualties of a very visible war.

The Guardian recently showed images of areas where no recovery teams have been able to enter for more than a year, leaving countless victims entombed beneath the debris.

Deaths That Never Make the Lists

The official death count focuses on those killed by direct strikes. However, many Palestinians died slowly from wounds that went untreated, hunger that could not be eased, and illnesses that turned fatal because medications were blocked.

Children weakened by malnutrition are more susceptible to winter infections. Older people die from a lack of heart medicine. Cancer patients fade away after the treatment centers were destroyed, and infants die because incubators have no fuel.

None of these deaths is counted in the toll issued to the world.

Humanitarian groups estimate that indirect deaths, caused by hunger, exposure, disease, and medical collapse, may rival or exceed the direct casualties. Without functioning hospitals, the true breadth of loss is impossible to measure.

Children Who Never Had a Chance

More children have been killed in Gaza since 2023 than in all global conflicts of the past decade combined. UNICEF’s teams warn that an entire generation has been scarred beyond anything previously documented.

Some children were found without identification. Others were buried as “unknown child.” Many survived initial strikes but died from dehydration or infection days later, unrecorded.

A number does not capture their faces, their potential, or the silent futures stolen from them.

The Disappeared: Lives Erased With No Witnesses

One tragedy unique to Gaza is the complete erasure of multi-generational families, including grandparents, parents, and children, all killed together. When every witness is gone, deaths slip through the cracks of documentation. There is no relative left to notify authorities, no one to retrieve remains, no one to confirm the names of the dead.

A local journalist described it simply: “Some families have been removed from the world. There is no one left to say they existed.”

Hospitals and civil registries have been bombed. Computer servers were destroyed. Archives burned, and even when officials try to record deaths, they work with incomplete, inconsistent data.

The infrastructure of memory, the ability to store a name, a file, a certificate, is gone. This destruction is not accidental. By erasing documentation systems, the true scale of killing becomes unverifiable, allowing those responsible to deny, minimise, or dispute the numbers.

The Real Toll Could Be Above 100,000

Independent analysts examining satellite images, mass graves, recovery patterns, and excess mortality trends believe the real death toll may already surpass 100,000.

That would make Gaza one of the deadliest conflicts of the 21st century, per capita, yet global coverage and political response remain shockingly muted.

Why the World Stopped Reacting

There is a disturbing desensitization at play. Global audiences have seen so many images of Gaza’s ruins that the mind shuts down. Large numbers feel abstract. Political alliances overshadow moral clarity, while governments avoid calling the situation by its true name.

“This silence protects those responsible and abandons those suffering.”

Every Number Is a Name

Each of the more than 70,000 is a person, a story, a life, a dream, a family. The official count tells only a portion of Gaza’s tragedy. The unseen dead, the unrecorded, the unnamed must also be remembered.

This war has broken Gaza’s population, its infrastructure, and its ability to document its own pain. The world must not let the victims disappear into statistical shadows.

Recognizing the full scale of loss is not just a matter of accuracy. It is an act of dignity, a demand for justice, and a reminder that behind every number is a life that mattered.

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How Israel’s New West Bank Operation and Fresh Gaza Strikes Show the War Never Ended

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The ceasefire was supposed to bring a pause. Instead, Palestinians woke to the sound of helicopters circling over the occupied West Bank and reports of new strikes hitting Gaza. On 26 November 2025, Israeli forces launched a large-scale raid in the northern West Bank city of Tubas, supported by gunfire from the air. Hours later, Gaza officials reported fresh airstrikes that killed and injured civilians.

Soldiers sealed off neighbourhoods, stormed homes, and detained residents. Families were ordered to evacuate, while streets were turned into military zones. At the same time, Gaza faced renewed bombing despite the truce announced in October. According to Gaza health authorities, at least 24 Palestinians were killed in the latest strike, including children. This is not a ceasefire, but a war under a different name.

West Bank Under Fire

The raid in Tubas marked one of the biggest Israeli operations in the West Bank this year. Soldiers used helicopter cover as they moved through the city. Homes were taken over and turned into military positions. At least 22 Palestinians were detained in the first hours alone.

Families were forced to leave their houses and were warned not to return until the operation ended. Streets were blocked, and checkpoints appeared overnight. Local officials described the raid as collective punishment rather than a security measure.

This is part of a wider trend. The West Bank has seen near-daily raids since late 2023. According to UN monitors, more than 670 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since October 2023. Thousands have been detained. So, the occupation has tightened, not eased.

Gaza Hit Again: A Ceasefire Broken Repeatedly

Gaza was supposed to be under a ceasefire. Yet Israeli strikes continue. On 22 November 2025, a new wave of attacks killed at least 24 people, among them children and women. The strikes hit areas where displaced families had taken shelter.

The ceasefire has seen hundreds of violations, including drones, artillery fire, and raids. UN rights experts warned that Israel’s actions risk collapsing the fragile truce altogether. For families in Gaza, the message is clear that the truce exists in speeches, not on the ground.

Life Between Raids and Ruins

In Gaza, people have survived two years of bombardment. More than 70,000 Palestinians. Entire neighbourhoods are rubble, and more than 1.5 million people live in tents, unfinished buildings, or temporary shelters.

Every new strike adds fresh fear. Children wake from nightmares, while parents rebuild flimsy shelters again and again. The sound of jets or drones brings panic.

In the West Bank, fear takes a different shape. Night raids, checkpoints, armed settlers, and sudden crackdowns shape daily life. People live under the constant threat of arrest or violence. Ultimately, the violence is continuous.

International Silence and Double Standards

Despite the evidence of new attacks, global powers say little. Governments welcome the ceasefire while ignoring its collapse. The US continues supplying weapons, while European states focus on diplomacy rather than accountability.

UN experts warned in November that Israel’s actions in both Gaza and the West Bank threaten regional stability. However, warnings alone do not save lives. The international system shows one truth that Palestinians are left to face occupation violence with no meaningful protection.

Stories Buried Inside Headlines

In Tubas, families hid inside dark rooms as gunfire echoed outside. Mothers held their children tight, while fathers tried to shield their sons from soldiers entering the house.

In Gaza, a father pulled his daughter from debris after the latest strike. She was still breathing. He told reporters he thought the ceasefire would last. These stories rarely make it into global headlines, but they define Palestinian life.

The War Never Ended

The new West Bank raids and Gaza strikes prove something essential that Israel is not respecting the ceasefire. The occupation has simply shifted tactics. Instead of full-scale bombardment, it now uses raids, targeted attacks, and pressure strategies.

For Palestinians, the war continues every day, in different locations, with different weapons.

Israel’s goal remains the same: to control, fragment, and pressure a population already shattered by siege and displacement.

The Ceasefire Was Never Real

The latest raids and airstrikes expose the truth that the war against the Palestinians has never paused. It changed shape, shifted zones, but it did not end. A ceasefire means safety, while Palestinians have none.

Until the world recognises this reality and demands accountability, the violence will continue. Whether it be in Gaza’s ruins, in West Bank cities, or in every Palestinian home living under the shadow of occupation.

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Crimes Against Humanity

Winter Without Shelter: How Floods Are Turning Gaza’s Camps Into Swamps of Despair

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In a series of unfortunate events in the history of Gaza, the late-November storm arrived without preparations. In one of Gaza’s sprawling camps, children stood ankle-deep in freezing brown water inside their dismal tents. Their tiny feet sank into a mix of mud and sewage. Parents used plastic bowls to scoop out filthy floodwater, while battling a storm that swallowed everything they once owned. Moreover, in several low-lying areas, flood levels rose to around 40 to 50 centimeters. Resultantly, it swamped thousands of makeshift shelters and even forced one field hospital to shut down operations.

Specifically, for Gaza’s innocent families, who already fled more than two years of severe bombardment, the arrival of winter feels like a new kind of war. It was reported that a large majority of Gaza’s more than 2 million population have been displaced at least once. Furthermore, many now live in fragile tents or shacks on unstable, sandy ground. When it comes to local authorities, they estimate that around 70,000 people have been killed and more than 171,000 are injured since October 2023. The survivors now face a second catastrophe in the shape of a winter that strikes the homeless first.

Gaza After Two Years of War

After relentless airstrikes and heinous ground invasions, whole districts of Gaza lie flattened. Housing stock has been decimated, while water networks, sewage pipelines, and electrical systems have been destroyed. According to humanitarian assessments, 1.5 million people now depend entirely on emergency shelter materials, but the majority live in informal tents, unfinished buildings, or overcrowded UNRWA facilities.

Reports shared by the Norwegian Refugee Council confirm that displacement has reached historic levels. Meanwhile, UNOCHA notes that 500,000 internally displaced people attempted to return to northern Gaza in early 2025, only to find ruins of homes without doors, windows, or roofs. Gaza is no longer merely war-torn, but a mass of homelessness entering the coldest months of the year.

Floods in the Camps

This new storm has transformed whole camps into rivers of mud. It is documented how heavy rain overwhelmed Gaza’s already shattered terrain, turning roads into streams and sinking tents in minutes.

UN and aid agencies estimate that around 13,000 tents were damaged or destroyed, impacting more than 13,000 households. For families who have fled bombing, displacement, and hunger, seeing their last sheet of plastic ripped away by the storm is a cruelty that no one can prepare for.

A Desert of Tents

Local authorities and international NGOs agree that Gaza needs around 300,000 tents or prefabricated units to shelter roughly 1.5 million displaced Palestinians.

Shelter Cluster and UN assessments show that 1.5 million people urgently require winter-appropriate shelter materials, yet almost none have arrived. UNOCHA noted that at one point in early 2025, only 72 high-performance tents had been approved for entry into Gaza due to severe restrictions. Though the scale of need is immense, the world’s response has been minimal.

Why the Tents Aren’t Coming?

The bottleneck at Gaza’s crossings is not incidental but largely structural. It is reported that Israel classifies essential shelter materials, like tent poles, wooden beams, thick plastic sheets, pipes, and tools, as “dual use,” subjecting them to intense restrictions. These delays mean that even the most basic winterization efforts become impossible.

Shelter Cluster and frontline NGOs accuse Israeli authorities of arbitrary rejections, slow approvals, and constantly changing paperwork. It is making winter preparation “negligible compared to the scale of needs.” The International Rescue Committee adds that the recent storms flooded the majority of the makeshift tents, leaving families literally sleeping in the open. The winter suffering in Gaza is not a natural disaster alone, but is shaped by policy and prolonged siege.

Children, the Elderly, and the Most Vulnerable at Breaking Point

It is reported that children wearing nothing but thin shirts and flip flops, shivering in the cold. Their blankets are often wet, and their clothing rarely dries. Hunger weakens their bodies, while the cold attacks whatever strength remains.

On the other hand, many elderly people and people with disabilities cannot move quickly when tents flood, becoming stranded in freezing mud until family members can carry them to safety. UNRWA notes that around 79,000 displaced Palestinians are sheltering in 85 overcrowded schools, many of which also suffer from leaks and flood damage.

These are the faces of winter’s cruelty. Children are trembling in soaked clothes, elderly men and women unable to rise from muddy ground, and parents helpless in the face of the cold they cannot keep out.

“Ceasefire” Without Safety

Despite a ceasefire being announced in mid-October, aid flows remain far below the levels promised under the truce framework. People continue to die from exposure, untreated infections, and the compounded effects of hunger and cold.

The winter crisis reveals a fundamental truth that ending airstrikes does not end the war when siege, deprivation, and structural violence continue. For Gaza’s displaced population, winter is proof that the occupation’s harms extend far beyond bombs.

International Law and the Crime of Leaving People to Freeze

International law is explicit that denying adequate shelter or exposing civilians to deadly conditions can constitute inhuman treatment and may qualify as part of the “conditions of life” element in genocide determinations. Reports from humanitarian monitors, OCHA, and global legal experts warn that Gaza’s winter crisis is not just mismanagement, but a grave violation of human rights on a catastrophic scale.

UN rapporteurs and shelter advocacy groups continue urging states to pressure Israel to allow winterization supplies into Gaza. However, until pressure becomes action, statements remain hollow.

Conclusion

Winter storms are natural, but children sleeping in sewage-soaked clothes are not. That suffering is political, but a result of choices about what to bomb, what to blockade, and what to deny.

Gaza does not need sympathetic headlines about bad weather. It needs homes, infrastructure, open crossings, and accountability. It needs the world to stop treating winter misery as an inevitable tragedy and instead recognize it as a policy-driven crisis that can be changed.

Until Palestinians have the right to warmth, shelter, and stability, every storm will be another form of violence, and every winter will be a renewed assault on a people already fighting to survive.

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