KHAN YUNIS, Palestinian Territories: Three children play with sand and pebbles among the tombstones in a southern Gaza cemetery, while a teenage boy, barefoot, carries two buckets of water through the graveyard before vanishing into a tent.
These macabre scenes are a daily reality for some displaced Palestinians, who, unable to find shelter elsewhere, have resorted to pitching tents in a cemetery in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip.
“We had no other choice,” said Randa Musleh from inside her tent, drinking tea along with some of her 11 children.
She told AFP landlords “were asking for high sums of money.”
A relatively small patch of land covering 50 square meters (540 square feet) can cost as must as 1,000 shekels ($300) a month, Musleh said — a prohibitive sum for most Gazans.
She fled to Khan Yunis with her children when Israeli military operations intensified near their home in Beit Hanun, in Gaza’s north.
“I walked and walked until I found land for my children in a livable place... People told us that we wouldn’t have to pay here, between the desert and the cemetery,” she said.
“So, we set up tents and stayed here.”
As the Israeli army presses its offensive inside Gaza City, growing numbers of residents have fled south in recent days, scrambling to find space in an already overcrowded area where hundreds of thousands are sheltering.
On Thursday, the Israeli army said 700,000 people had left Gaza City, the territory’s largest urban center.
Israel says it seeks to dismantle remaining Hamas groupings in one of the last strongholds of the militant group, whose October 2023 attack triggered the war.
The UN humanitarian agency OCHA reported a lower figure, saying 388,400 people have been displaced from Gaza’s north since mid-August, most of them from Gaza City.
With demand for transportation and shelter soaring, prices have skyrocketed. According to UN data, families may be charged over $3,000 for transport, a tent and land space.
Many cannot afford these costs and are forced to travel on foot, setting up tents wherever space is available.
Living conditions are often dire.
“There is no water here, and my children walk about four kilometers (2.5 miles)” to get water, said Musleh.
“And we are in the desert — there are scorpions and snakes.”
The proximity to graves adds to the families’ distress.
“We are in the middle of the cemetery, and we find no life,” said Umm Muhammad Abu Shahla, who evacuated from the northern town of Beit Lahia.
“We live with the dead and our condition has become like that of the dead,” she told AFP.
To Abu Shahla, there is little hope after nearly two years of war.
“Let them bomb us with a nuclear missile on the entire Gaza Strip so that we can rest,” she said.
‘We live with the dead’: Displaced Gazans shelter in cemetery
https://arab.news/yem4n
‘We live with the dead’: Displaced Gazans shelter in cemetery
- “We had no other choice,” said Randa Musleh from inside her tent, drinking tea along with some of her 11 children
- “People told us that we wouldn’t have to pay here, between the desert and the cemetery”
Trump says change of power in Iran would be ‘best thing’
- Trump’s comments were his most overt call yet for the toppling of Iran’s clerical establishment
- USS Gerald R. Ford — the world’s largest warship — would be “leaving very soon” for the Middle East
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said Friday that a change of government in Iran would be the “best thing that could happen,” as he sent a second aircraft carrier to the Middle East to ratchet up military pressure on the Islamic republic.
Trump’s comments were his most overt call yet for the toppling of Iran’s clerical establishment, and came as he pushes on Washington’s arch-foe Tehran to make a deal to limit its nuclear program.
At the same time, the exiled son of the Iranian shah toppled in the 1979 Islamic revolution renewed his calls for international intervention following a bloody crackdown on protests by Tehran.
“Seems like that would be the best thing that could happen,” Trump told reporters at the Fort Bragg military base in North Carolina when a journalist asked if he wanted “regime change” in Iran.
Trump declined to say who he would want to take over in Iran from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but he added that “there are people.”
He has previously backed off full-throated calls for a change of government in Iran, warning that it could cause chaos, although he has made threats toward Khamenei in the past.
Speaking earlier at the White House, Trump said that the USS Gerald R. Ford — the world’s largest warship — would be “leaving very soon” for the Middle East to up the pressure on Iran.
“In case we don’t make a deal, we’ll need it,” Trump said.
The giant vessel is currently in the Caribbean following the US overthrow of Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro. Another carrier, the USS Abraham Lincoln, is one of 12 US ships already in the Middle East.
‘Terribly difficult’
When Iran began its crackdown on protests last month — which rights groups say killed thousands — Trump initially said that the United States was “locked and loaded” to help demonstrators.
But he has recently focused his military threats on Tehran’s nuclear program, which US forces struck last July during Israel’s unprecedented 12-day war with Iran.
The protests have subsided for now but US-based Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s last shah, urged international intervention to support the Iranian people.
“We are asking for a humanitarian intervention to prevent more innocent lives being killed in the process,” he told the Munich Security Conference.
It followed a call by the opposition leader, who has not returned to his country since before the revolution, for Iranians at home and abroad to continue demonstrations this weekend.
Videos verified by AFP showed people in Iran this week chanting anti-government slogans as the clerical leadership celebrated the anniversary of the Islamic revolution.
Iran and the United States, who have had no diplomatic relations since shortly after the revolution, held talks on the nuclear issue last week in Oman. No dates have been set for new talks yet.
The West fears the program is aimed at making a bomb, which Tehran denies.
The head of the UN nuclear watchdog, Rafael Grossi, said Friday that reaching an accord with Iran on inspections of its processing facilities was possible but “terribly difficult.”
Reformists released
Trump said after talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this week that he wanted to continue talks with Iran, defying pressure from his key ally for a tougher stance.
The Israeli prime minister himself expressed skepticism at the quality of any agreement if it didn’t also cover Iran’s ballistic missiles and support for regional proxies.
According to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency, 7,008 people, mostly protesters, were killed in the recent crackdown, although rights groups warn the toll is likely far higher.
More than 53,000 people have also been arrested, it added.
The Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR) NGO said “hundreds” of people were facing charges linked to the protests that could see them sentenced to death.
Figures working within the Iranian system have also been arrested, with three politicians detained this week from the so-called reformist wing of Iranian politics supportive of President Masoud Pezeshkian.
The three — Azar Mansouri, Javad Emam and Ebrahim Asgharzadeh — were released on bail Thursday and Friday, their lawyer Hojjat Kermani told the ISNA news agency.











