Clearing Gaza’s surface of bombs will take up to 30 years, aid group says

This aerial picture shows destroyed buildings in Gaza City's Al-Remal neighborhood on October 23, 2025. Aid group Humanity & Inclusion says clearing the surface of Gaza of unexploded ordnance will likely take at least 20 years. (AFP)
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Updated 24 October 2025
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Clearing Gaza’s surface of bombs will take up to 30 years, aid group says

  • Humanity & Inclusion group says underground bombs will remain for generations
  • Dozens already killed in Gaza by lethal war remnants

GENEVA: Clearing the surface of Gaza of unexploded ordnance will likely take between 20 to 30 years, according to an official with aid group Humanity & Inclusion, describing the enclave as a “horrific, unmapped minefield.”
More than 53 people have been killed and hundreds injured by lethal remnants from the two-year Israel-Hamas war, according to a UN-led database, which is thought by aid groups to be a huge underestimate.
A US-brokered ceasefire this month has raised hopes that the huge task of removing them from among millions of tons of rubble can begin.
“If you’re looking at a full clearance, it’s never happening, it’s subterranean. We will find it for generations to come,” said Nick Orr, an Explosive Ordnance Disposal expert at Humanity & Inclusion, comparing the situation with British cities after World War Two.
“Surface clearance, now that’s something that’s attainable within a generation, I think 20 to 30 years,” he added.
“It’s going to be a very small chipping away at a very big problem.”
Orr, who went to Gaza several times during the conflict, is part of his organization’s seven-person team that will begin identifying war remnants there in essential infrastructure like hospitals and bakeries next week.
For now, however, aid groups like his have not been given blanket Israeli permission to start work on removing and destroying the ordnance nor to import the required equipment, he said.
COGAT, the arm of the Israeli military overseeing Gaza aid, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It blocks items into Gaza which it considers have “dual use” — both civilian and military.
Orr said it was seeking permission to import supplies to burn away bombs rather than detonate them, to ease concerns about them being repurposed by Hamas.
He voiced support for a temporary force such as one foreseen in the 20-point ceasefire plan.
“If there is going to be any kind of future inside of Gaza, there needs to be an enabling security force that allows humanitarians to work,” Orr said.
 


Extermination of Palestinians must stop: African Union chair

Updated 20 min 51 sec ago
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Extermination of Palestinians must stop: African Union chair

ADDIS ABABA: The “extermination” of the Palestinian people must end, the chairman of the African Union Commission Mahmoud Ali Youssouf said on Saturday as he launched the organization’s 39th summit.
“In the Middle East, Palestine and the suffering of its people also challenge our consciences. The extermination of this people must stop,” said Youssouf, who was elected to head the institution a year ago.
The Gaza Strip, a small territory surrounded by Israel, Egypt, and the Mediterranean Sea, has been under a very strict Israeli siege since the start of the war triggered by Hamas’s deadly attack on October 7, 2023.
That attack resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official data.
Since then, at least 71,667 Palestinians have been killed in the small coastal territory by Israel’s retaliatory military campaign, according to Gaza’s health ministry.
He also touched on the multiple conflicts raging in Africa.
“From Sudan to the Sahel, to eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, in Somalia and elsewhere, our people continue to pay the heavy price of instability,” Youssouf said.
The summit brings together heads of state from the 55 member states of the African Union over two days.
This year’s theme is water sanitation.