GAZA: A football team made up of Palestinians who lost limbs to Israeli fire in the Gaza Strip is giving its players new purpose.
Players aged between 13 and 42 play eight-a-side intra-squad games. Most have only one leg and play on crutches.
“I was sitting home most of the time, sad. Now I am happy, have friends and we play,” said Ibrahim Khattab, 13, who lost his left leg during the 2014 war between Israel and Gaza when an Israeli missile struck while he was playing football outside his home.
“He was always desperate, now after he joined the football team, I see he has hope,” his father, Khaled, said. “He used to spend most of his time playing games on a tablet.”
Fouad Abu Ghalyoun, a member of the Palestinian paralympic committee, founded the team, having come up with the idea after a match last year between amputee squads from England and Turkey. Within five months, some 16 players had signed up.
“It was hard to convince those with amputated limps to come forward. Nowadays they are calling us to ask about exercise times,” said Abu Ghalyoun.
“Football is the beloved game of youth, so first it is entertaining and second ... (it) is a kind of psychological support,” he told Reuters.
The team’s coach, Khaled Al-Mabhouh, said the squad was still lacking sturdier crutches to replace regular ones that tend to break when a player puts weight on them during a match.
Some of the 54 Palestinians who had limbs amputated after being wounded by Israeli fire during recent protests along the Gaza-Israel border have expressed interest in joining the team.
At least 130 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli troops during mass demonstrations since March 30, Gaza health officials said. On Thursday, Gaza officials said a 17-year-old Palestinian was shot dead by the Israeli army at the border. The Israeli military said troops fired at two would-be infiltrators.
Protesters are demanding a right of return to what is now Israel for those who fled or were forced to flee their homes in the war around its creation in 1948, and for millions of their descendants.
Israel’s tactics in confronting the protests have drawn international condemnation. But support has come from its main ally, the United States, which like Israel has accused Gaza’s dominant Hamas group of instigating violence and attempting to breach the border to carry out attacks.
Amputee football team a game changer for Gaza wounded
Amputee football team a game changer for Gaza wounded
- Players aged between 13 and 42 play eight-a-side intra-squad games
- Team made up of Palestinians who lost limbs to Israeli fire in the Gaza Strip
MESIF 2026 lands in Riyadh, driving future of sports investment
- Senior sports leaders to gather in capital as 2-day Middle East Sports Investment Forum focuses on performance, football, long-term sporting legacy
RIYADH: Riyadh will host the Middle East Sports Investment Forum on Jan. 27-28, bringing together senior decision-makers from across football, major events, infrastructure, media and investment as the region sharpens its focus on high-performance sport and long-term legacy.
The forum will examine how the Middle East’s rapidly expanding sports sector is shifting from headline events to sustainable systems, with discussions set to cover elite facilities, athlete pathways, commercial growth and fan engagement.
Confirmed speakers include Abdullah Al-Rasheed, director of investment enablement at the Saudi Ministry of Sport; Hani Ballan, CEO of the Qatar Stars League; Nader Nasser Hamood Al-Rawahy, operations excellence lead at Oman Vision 2040; Nasser Al‑Khori, executive director of the Generation Amazing Foundation; Haya Sawan, managing partner at Motion Academy; and Marwan Albazie, deputy CEO of the Islamic Solidarity Games Local Organizing Committee.
These leaders bring expertise in government policy, league development, social impact, and investment strategy, offering insights into both the commercial and societal potential of sport across the Middle East.
Football is expected to feature prominently, with a dedicated session on the future of the game in the region exploring performance, engagement and commercial strategy as Saudi Arabia continues to build its global sporting profile.
Infrastructure and major events will also be in focus, as industry leaders assess how world-class venues and international competitions can drive economic impact while supporting athlete development and community participation.
The forum concludes with a tour of Kingdom Arena, underlining Riyadh’s ambition to position its venues as year-round performance hubs rather than event-only destinations.













