Gazan Workers in Israel Stranded in Occupied West Bank

Palestinians from Gaza stranded in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, follow the news in a hotel room in Ramallah. Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP
Palestinians from Gaza stranded in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, follow the news in a hotel room in Ramallah. Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP
TT

Gazan Workers in Israel Stranded in Occupied West Bank

Palestinians from Gaza stranded in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, follow the news in a hotel room in Ramallah. Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP
Palestinians from Gaza stranded in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, follow the news in a hotel room in Ramallah. Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP

Abderrahman Balata and numerous other Gazans who had been working in Israel now find themselves stranded in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, an unfamiliar place far from their war-torn homes

In a one-star hotel room, Balata, 42, sat with other Palestinian workers watching non-stop news coverage of the fighting in Gaza. Their families are left behind under Israeli bombing, leaving the men feeling fear and impotence.

Hamas carried out a surprise operation against Israel on Saturday, breaking through the highly-militarized border fence in Gaza before killing more than 900 people in Israel, which responded with artillery and air strikes that left another 900 people dead in the Palestinian enclave, said AFP.

Balata said he decided to leave Tel Aviv where he worked as an electrician, fearing retaliation.

"With three other workers we left Israel in a taxi".

"There is no way to get to Gaza" which is under total Israeli siege, "which is why we went to the West Bank", he said.

"I don't know anyone here", Balata said. "No one took us in, so we went to the governorate building and they put us in this hotel."

While Balata decided to go to the West Bank, other Palestinian workers said the Israeli army took them forcefully to the West Bank after detaining them for hours.

In the governorate building of Ramallah and Al-Bireh, tens of workers from the Gaza Strip sat in a room, waiting to be moved to a place to sleep.

The governor, Laila Ghannam, told AFP: "They are our people, and we cannot abandon them in these exceptional circumstances, so at least they have the basic necessities of life."

Many workers refused to speak to AFP out of fear of losing their work permits.

Bassem Katarana, 41, said that his family told him that his son Suhail, 23, had been "martyred" in an air raid on the Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza.

Katarana recounted how the Israeli army raided his workplace in the town of Ghadira while he was sleeping, confiscated his phone and papers, took his fingerprints before the papers were given back and then left him at a checkpoint on the road to Ramallah.

"My wife is stranded in Arish (Egypt). I hope we get to see my son before he is buried," Katarana said.

Longing 'to die together'
Israel has blockaded Gaza, home to around 2.3 million people -- of whom more than 50 percent are unemployed -- since Hamas assumed control there in 2007, leading to four previous wars with Israel.

The Israeli Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said last month that it had issued about 18,500 work permits to Palestinians in Gaza.

The Palestinian Labour Office, which is responsible for Palestinian workers in Israel, reported the "expulsion of tens of Palestinian workers from their workplaces since the beginning of the fighting".

Labour official Karim Mardawi told AFP "Saturday we started getting large numbers of workers at checkpoints who were leaving Israel".

Jawad, 43, who refused to give his full name, said he had been working in construction and cleaning.

"Our employer locked us in a room on Saturday in Tiberias for our safety, then on Sunday morning put us on buses and said he's sending us to the West Bank without giving us any money.

"When we asked him to pay us, he threatened to turn us in to the police," said Jawad.

His bus stopped at a checkpoint in the northern West Bank. He first passed through Jenin then Nablus, two towns that have witnessed deadly violence in recent months between Israeli soldiers and settlers on the one hand and Palestinian residents on the other.

"In Jenin and Nablus, everyone told us it was too dangerous," said Jawad, who ended up going to Ramallah.

Jawad described his situation as "humiliating".

"I have no money. My family is in Gaza and my children call me crying, asking when I will come back," he said.

"If they are martyred, I would not be able to see them. It's better if I'm there with them so we can die together," he said, wishing he could go home "right away".



Late Night Tears and Hugs for Released Palestinian Prisoners 

Freed Palestinian prisoner Nidaa Zaghebi is greeted by her daughters, after her release from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, in Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, January 20, 2025. (Reuters)
Freed Palestinian prisoner Nidaa Zaghebi is greeted by her daughters, after her release from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, in Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, January 20, 2025. (Reuters)
TT

Late Night Tears and Hugs for Released Palestinian Prisoners 

Freed Palestinian prisoner Nidaa Zaghebi is greeted by her daughters, after her release from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, in Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, January 20, 2025. (Reuters)
Freed Palestinian prisoner Nidaa Zaghebi is greeted by her daughters, after her release from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, in Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, January 20, 2025. (Reuters)

Two buses carrying Palestinian prisoners released in the Gaza ceasefire deal had to inch through a thick crowd when they at last arrived in the West Bank at 2 am Monday.

After the doors opened, women hugged their relatives and cried tears of joy while throngs of people chanted, waved flags and climbed atop the vehicles. Others lit fireworks in the normally quiet suburb of Beitunia.

Bushra al-Tawil, a Palestinian journalist jailed in Israel in March 2024, was among the first batch of prisoners to be released in the truce.

Over the next 42 days, around 1,900 Palestinians are due to be freed in exchange for 33 Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza.

Tawil began her journey at 3 am the day before, when she was taken from her prison to another nearer the separation wall. There, she was grouped with other inmates awaiting movement.

"The wait was extremely hard. But thank God, we were certain that at any moment we would be released," she said.

Tawil had only learned she would be freed from other inmates who had attended a hearing.

"The lawyers told them the (ceasefire) deal had been announced and was in the implementation phase," said Tawil, whose father is also in an Israeli jail.

"I was worried about him. He is still a prisoner, but I just received good news that he will be released as part of this deal."

A crowd of hundreds of Palestinians pressed around Tawil and the 89 other prisoners released in exchange for three Israeli hostages held in Gaza since October 7, 2023.

Many in the crowd had gathered earlier on a hill in Beitunia for a view of Israel's Ofer prison, from where the prisoners were being released.

"We came here to witness it and feel the emotions, just like the families of the prisoners who are being released today," said Amanda Abu Sharkh, 23, from the nearby city of Ramallah.

'They feel like family'

"All the prisoners being released today feel like family to us. They are part of us, even if they're not blood relatives," she told AFP.

As night fell and the wait continued in the cold, dozens of small fires illuminated the stony hill.

Excitement grew when news broke that the three Israeli hostages had been released.

Mohammad, 20, said he had come from Ramallah with his friends as soon as he heard the development.

Recently released from Ofer prison himself, he expressed "great joy" at the thought of families being reunited.

"I know a lot of people in prison, there are innocent people, children and women," he said.

The prisoners set to be released during the initial 42-day ceasefire period include many held under administrative detention, which does not require formal charges.

Others are serving life sentences for attacks that killed Israelis.

Farther in Beitunia, even bigger crowds gathered at the roundabout where the prisoners were eventually dropped off, waving Palestinian and Hamas flags, chanting slogans and filling the streets in anticipation.

'There will be lots of crying'

An 18-year-old woman could barely contain her joy as she awaited her mother's release.

"I'll hug her right away -- of course, I'll hug her. At first, it'll just be tears of joy," she said.

"After that, she'll tell us about her time in prison, and we'll tell her about our lives without her. I'm sure there will be a lot of crying," she said as she stood by her brother, sister and aunt.

Her mother, a doctor, had been arrested in January 2024 in the north of the occupied West Bank for social media activity, she said.

"They accused her of incitement because of posts she wrote on Facebook," she said, calling the charges "ridiculous" for a middle-aged nurse and trained midwife.

Though he had been freed after being arrested with his son at the start of the war, his son remains detained and is not on the initial release list.

Oday, who preferred not to give his last name for fear of jeopardizing his son's release, said his son had been arrested for social media activity.

But he said he wanted to celebrate all the releases on Sunday night because he knows what captivity is like.

"You can't think for yourself and for your son only," he said, adding he was happy hostages were being released from Gaza as well.