For Palestinians returning to Gaza, a bittersweet reunion

Palestinian mother of three, Eatedal Rayyan, 29, reunites with her husband, Ahmed Rayyan, as she returns to Gaza with their children after she received medical treatment in Egypt, following nearly two years away from Gaza, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 5, 2026. (REUTERS)
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Updated 06 February 2026
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For Palestinians returning to Gaza, a bittersweet reunion

  • Being away from home is hard. Life in Gaza is still beautiful, even though it’s been destroyed

GAZA/CAIRO: Eatedal Rayyan waited for this moment for nearly two years: a reunion with her husband in Gaza, where she says yearning for family and homeland has persisted despite widespread destruction from the enclave’s two-year war.

Rayyan, 29, left Gaza with her mother and three children after suffering a leg injury that doctors warned could need amputation if left untreated. She was one of tens of thousands who fled to Egypt in the early months of the conflict.

After months of treatment in Egypt, Rayyan was eventually able to walk again. And on Thursday, she, her mother, and her children were among a small number of Palestinians allowed to return to Gaza after Israel reopened the Rafah border crossing, largely shut since the start of the fighting in October 2023.

“I long to return to my homeland, despite everything that happened, the bombardment, and ‌despite the fact ‌that I will be returning to live in a tent,” Rayyan, who fled in ‌March 2024, said from ‌Egypt before crossing back in on Thursday.

Reuters followed her journey from the Egyptian town of Al-Arish, where thousands of Palestinians have taken refuge. Her children — Hanan, 8, Ezz, 5, and Mohammed, 4 — grinned from ear to ear as they packed their suitcases with blankets and winter coats.

Hanan put a bow in her hair in anticipation of the reunion with her father.

“We are going to Gaza!” the kids chanted excitedly before heading off toward the border.

Rayyan and her children left midday on Thursday for the Rafah crossing, about 50 km from Al-Arish.

Once there, they would have to clear three checkpoints: one run by Egypt, another by Palestinian and European officials, and a third by Israeli security forces.

A bus would then carry them from Rafah, which Israeli forces have destroyed and depopulated after retaining control of the town ‌following the October ceasefire deal, to the city of Khan Younis in Hamas-controlled territory.

It was nearly midnight when Rayyan and her family arrived in Khan Younis, with her husband, Ahmed, eagerly waiting.

The two held each other in a long embrace. Ahmed kissed and hugged his children.

The girl, Hanan, clung to her father’s leg.

Rayyan said she knew much of Gaza had been demolished in the war but that re-entering still shocked her to the core.

“No building is standing,” Rayyan said.

“Everything is destroyed, destroyed. There is no electricity or anything.”

Their family used to have a large house in Al-Saftawi, a district near Gaza City in the north, but it was destroyed in the war, Ahmed said. They would now live together in a tent in a Gaza City encampment.

“I tried in every possible way and managed to get three mattresses for five people to sleep on,” Ahmed said.

The Rafah crossing is the only exit and entry point for nearly all of Gaza’s more than 2 million residents.

Its limited reopening on Monday was a key element of a US plan to end the Israel-Hamas war.

Around 50 people were expected to cross in each direction daily, but the actual numbers have been far lower.

On Thursday, only 21 Palestinians, including Rayyan and her children, re-entered Gaza, according to enclave authorities.

Rayyan said many people had asked her why she would want to leave Egypt for isolated, rubble-covered Gaza, where food and water are scarce, most of the population is displaced, and frequent ceasefire violations have killed hundreds of people.

“It is ‌true that life in Egypt was good; everyone was kind to us,” Rayyan said.

“But still, you long for your country, your family, your relatives, your husband, your life. Being away from home is hard. Life in Gaza is still beautiful, even though it’s been destroyed.”

 


Turkiye says Greece-Chevron activity off Crete unlawful

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Turkiye says Greece-Chevron activity off Crete unlawful

ANKARA: Turkiye said on ‌Thursday it opposed Greece’s “unilateral activities” in hydrocarbon fields south of Crete with a consortium led by US oil major Chevron as ​a violation of international law and good neighborly relations.
The Chevron-led consortium signed exclusive lease agreements on Monday to look for natural gas off southern Greece, expanding the United States’ presence in the eastern Mediterranean.
“We oppose this unlawful activity, which is being attempted in violation of the 2019 Memorandum of Understanding ‌on Maritime Jurisdiction ‌between Libya and our ​country,” ‌the ⁠Turkish Defense Ministry ​said at ⁠its weekly press briefing.
It said the activity, while not directly impacting Turkiye’s continental shelf in the region, also violated Libya’s maritime jurisdiction declared to the United Nations on May 27, 2025.
“We continue to provide the necessary support to the Libyan authorities to ⁠take action against these unilateral and ‌unlawful activities by Greece.
The 2019 ‌agreement signed by Turkiye and ​Libya set out maritime boundaries ‌in the Mediterranean Sea and was rejected by Greece ‌as it ignored the presence of the Greek island of Crete between the coasts of Turkiye and Libya.
The Chevron deal doubles the amount of Greek maritime acreage available ‌for exploration and is the second in months involving a US energy major ⁠as the ⁠European Union seeks to phase out supplies from Russia and the US seeks to replace them.
Neighbours and NATO members Turkiye and Greece have been at odds over a range of issues for decades, primarily maritime boundaries and rights in the Aegean, an area widely believed to hold energy resources and with key implications for airspace and military activity.
A 2023 declaration on friendly relations prompted a thaw in rhetoric ​between the two ​countries, though issues have remained unresolved despite leaders voicing a desire to address them.