DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Israel Says a Gaza Border Will Reopen, but Only for Palestinians to Leave

December 3, 2025
in News
Israel Says a Gaza Border Will Reopen, but Only for Palestinians to Leave

Israel said on Wednesday that it would begin allowing some Palestinians to leave the Gaza Strip for Egypt “in the coming days” through the Rafah border crossing.

Such an opening would be a lifeline for Gazans hoping to flee, particularly for the sick and wounded.

Israel’s military liaison on humanitarian affairs, widely known by its acronym, COGAT, said that the crossing would open only one way, allowing Palestinians to leave Gaza but not to return, and that it would be overseen in part by the European Union, working with Egypt and Israel.

But the Egyptian government on Wednesday denied that it was currently coordinating with Israel to reopen the Rafah crossing.

Egypt’s state information service said that, according to the cease-fire agreed upon between Israel and Hamas in October, the border had to be open in both directions. In addition to allowing Palestinians to leave Gaza for Egypt, that would most likely mean that the tens of thousands of Gazans displaced to Egypt could also begin returning home.

A spokesman for COGAT did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Egyptian statement.

Shortly after the October truce went into effect, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel announced that the Rafah crossing would remain closed. Mr. Netanyahu later said Israel would only open the crossing once Hamas handed over all the remains of deceased Israelis and foreign nationals still in Gaza.

COGAT’s announcement about Rafah came after Palestinian militants handed over some of the last remaining captives’ bodies in Gaza, with two believed to still be there. On Wednesday, Hamas said it would hand over another body to Israel via the Red Cross.

Much about how the Rafah crossing will operate remains unclear, such as when it may reopen and how many Palestinians may be allowed to leave.

The Rafah crossing was the main route out of Gaza for Palestinians who were able to escape during the first several months of the war. It was a gateway for many seeking medical treatment abroad, although Israel has also permitted some to leave through its territory.

Israeli forces invaded Rafah in May 2024 and seized the crossing. Israel and Egypt could not agree on how to reopen the border, which trapped some sick and wounded Palestinians without access to proper medical treatment.

At least 16,500 sick and injured Palestinians still need treatment unavailable in the devastated enclave, the World Health Organization said this week.

The Rafah crossing briefly reopened in February during a cease-fire that collapsed in mid-March. At the time, the E.U. border monitors, as well as officers from the internationally backed Palestinian Authority, helped oversee operations at the crossing.

Throughout the war, most Gazans have been unable to flee the Israeli military campaign for neighboring countries. Those who managed to leave often had to secure approval from Israeli and Egyptian security services.

More than 250 Israelis and foreign nationals were taken hostage during the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023, that ignited the war in Gaza. Two brief cease-fires freed more than 130 survivors, while Israeli forces rescued several others and recovered the bodies of still more.

In October, Hamas freed the final surviving 20 hostages and committed to handing over the remains of those who had been killed. Yet that process has taken time: Hamas says some were lost under rubble, while Israeli officials have accused Hamas of dragging its feet.

Two bodies — those of an Israeli and a Thai — are believed to still be somewhere in Gaza. Hamas officials, accompanied by the International Committee for the Red Cross, have been excavating parts of Gaza to find them.

If a body is found, the Israeli authorities will conduct forensic testing to establish whether it belongs to one of the final two people believed to have been taken captive. On Tuesday, Hamas handed over remains that Israeli officials later said did not belong to a hostage.

Aaron Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in Jerusalem.

The post Israel Says a Gaza Border Will Reopen, but Only for Palestinians to Leave appeared first on New York Times.

Plug-in hybrids were supposed to be Americans’ bridge to EVs. Now they’re fading from showrooms.
News

Plug-in hybrids were supposed to be Americans’ bridge to EVs. Now they’re fading from showrooms.

by Business Insider
February 9, 2026

Plug-in hybrids blend enough battery power to get a driver through the day and a gas engine for added range. ...

Read more
News

Prince William, Kate Middleton ‘deeply concerned’ as they address Epstein scandal for first time

February 9, 2026
News

China critic and former media tycoon Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in Hong Kong security case

February 9, 2026
News

Driver’s licenses aren’t a rite of passage anymore

February 9, 2026
News

Washington mom sentenced after killing 8-year-old adopted daughter, driving body across states in U-Haul months later

February 9, 2026
Details you missed in Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show

Details you missed in Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show

February 9, 2026
Dear Abby: My husband lost $600K on slot machines — now we’re bankrupt and elderly

Dear Abby: My husband lost $600K on slot machines — now we’re bankrupt and elderly

February 9, 2026
Singapore’s ST Engineering debuts the AirFish: A ‘ground effect’ craft that flies a few meters above the sea at up to 116 miles per hour

Singapore’s ST Engineering debuts the AirFish: A ‘ground effect’ craft that flies a few meters above the sea at up to 116 miles per hour

February 9, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026