Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Unrest in Egypt spells trouble for Gazans
Unrest in Egypt spells trouble for Gazans
Mar 16, 2026 1:53 AM

  Visiting the Gaza Strip to join his Palestinian family during the Eid holiday has proven to be an unwise decision for Wael Salem, a 24-year-old engineering student. He didn't know he was putting his academic studies in Sweden at risk.

  Salem is stuck in Gaza because Egypt has closed the Rafah crossing point, the Palestinian enclave's main gateway not only to Egypt, but to the rest of the outside world. He is one of hundreds of Palestinians who are not able to return to their work and studies outside Gaza as a result.

  Since the Egyptian military overthrew President Mohamed Morsi on July 3, Egypt has reduced the working hours at Rafah to about five a day.

  Gaza's Hamas authorities said that the crossing is, for all practical purposes, closed. Before July, an average of 1,200 travellers used to leave Gaza via Rafah each day. This figure has dwindled to around 150 after Morsi's ouster.

  On Saturday, Egypt unexpectedly opened the crossing to allow a number of homebound people into Gaza after they had been stuck in the Sinai for days. But the following day, only one bus left Gaza using the Rafah crossing.

  And on Monday, after 25 Egyptian soldiers were killed by a booby trap in the Sinai Peninsula, Egyptian authorities announced that the Rafah border will be closed until further notice.

  "The last two openings of the crossing happened without any coordination with us. It’s an exceptional occurence, and doesn’t reflect any improvement in the border operation," said Maher Abu Sabha, director of border crossings in Hamas' government in Gaza.

  Ihab al-Ghusen, a spokesperson for Hamas, said his government doesn’t have information as to when the border will be opened again, and that they were still negotiating with Egypt to reopen it.

  "There is a real crisis due to the sudden closure of the border. We have thousands of people stuck inside and outside Gaza," said Ghusen.

  Because Gaza has no airport, the Rafah crossing serves as a lifeline for the more than 1.5 million Palestinians who live in the besieged strip. Israel sometimes allows local employees of international organisations and holders of international passports to pass through its territory through the Erez crossing point in northern Gaza, in order to get to airports in Jordan.

  Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported Thursday that Israel's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) instructed the Coordination and Liaison Administration of the Erez Crossing to prepare for increased activity following the decision by the Egyptian authorities to close Rafah. Quoting sources from COGAT, the paper added that Erez was instructed to expect many applications from foreigners and Palestinians who could not exit through Rafah.

  Gaza's ruling Hamas movement, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, thought it had an important ally in Egypt when Morsi came to power in 2012. The former Egyptian president permanently opened the Rafah border, which was closed during Hosni Mubarak's time in office, and the tunnels connecting Gaza to Egypt also worked regularly.

  But in addition to closing Rafah, Egypt has also begun to systematically demolish the tunnels under the Gaza-Sinai border. These two measures, in addition to an alleged Egyptian media campaign against Hamas, have demoralised the Islamist movement in Gaza after a brief period of high expectations.

  Families gathered at the Palestinian side of the Rafah border, desperate to cross to Egypt before they were informed that the Egyptian authorities had closed the border until further notice.

  Egyptian Ibraheem Sayyed, 50, and his Palestinian wife managed to enter Gaza one day before the border closure. Sayyed said he had come to Gaza on urgent business and was supposed to spend only one day there. "I left my children behind in Port Said. I’m so worried about them because of what’s happening there. They are worried about their parents as well," he said, while unloading his luggage to go home.

  Salem said he had been aware that the Rafah border was not always stable, but he was very desperate to see his family after four lonely years in Sweden.

  "I’m very disappointed - I lost my flight already," he said. "I hope I won’t also lose the whole semester."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Palestinians rest at the Rafah crossing between Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip, after the crossing's closure August 19, 2013.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Inside Dar'aa
  The only outside visitors the people of Daraa are allowed to receive these days are friends and family attending funerals.   To access the city where Syria's uprising began, a local reporter simply had to tell the guards at the first checkpoint the truth: The husband of his wife's cousin had...
US Army “kill team” in Afghanistan posed for photos of murdered civilians
  German Magazine Der Spiegel has released hideous photographs of US soldiers posing with the dead bodies of defenseless Afghan civilians they killed.   Senior officials at Nato's International Security Assistance Force in Kabul have compared the pictures published by the German news weekly Der Spiegel to the images of US soldiers...
'CIA has no plans to suspend drone strikes in Pakistan'
  According to a report in the Washington Post, US defense officials have claimed that there is no plan to suspend or restrict the CIA’s drone campaign in Pakistan, and that the agency has not been asked to pull any of its employees out of Pakistan.   US and Pakistan’s relationship was...
Under Gaddafi's eyes
  Benghazi internal security headquarters, November 3, 1990. A fax arrives at 10:30 in the morning, addressed to the director from the head office in Tripoli.   "We received information about some of the suspicious people," it begins. A list of names and paragraphs of information follow.   One man is singled out...
UN: Libyan refugee crisis worsening
  The UN has said that almost 40,000 people have fled fighting in Libya's Western Mountains region in the past month.   Thousands of ethnic Berbers from Libya fled into Tunisia after a brief hiatus in their exodus last week because of fighting between Gaddafi troops and opposition forces for control of...
Libyan Karzai? Chalabi? Forget it
  NATO's political mission "should swiftly identify and nurture a national opposition and plot the path for a post-conflict transition to democracy, probably under UN auspices", or so advises the Financial Times in its lead editorial, "Plotting the Way Forward".   Both the title and the advice are borrowed from a past...
UN Investigator: Israel Engaged in Ethnic Cleansing
  Israel's expansion of settlements in East Jerusalem and eviction of Palestinians from their homes there is a form of ethnic cleansing, a United Nations investigator said on Monday.   United States academic Richard Falk was speaking to the UN Human Rights Council as it prepared to pass resolutions condemning settlement building...
Deraa: A city under a dark siege
  As darkness fell across it, Deraa was a city under siege.   Tanks and troops control all roads in and out. Inside the city, shops are shuttered and nobody dare walk the once bustling market streets, today transformed into the kill zone of rooftop snipers.   Trapped and terrified inside their homes,...
Israel arrests 100 Palestinian women in latest round-up
  Israeli troops arrested 100 Palestinian women in an overnight raid Thursday, the latest in a series of round-ups around the West Bank city of Nablus.   Israeli troops stormed a village near Nablus early Thursday, arresting more than 100 women, local officials said.   Hundreds of troops entered Awarta shortly after midnight...
Libyan woman tells of abuse
  A distraught Libyan woman has told journalists in Tripoli how she was raped by government troops, before being bundled away by officials.   Iman al-Obeidi sought out foreign reporters in the capital's Rixos hotel on Saturday morning, weeping and claiming that troops had detained her at a checkpoint, tied her up,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved