UNRWA Says Around 1 Million People Have Fled Rafah in Past 3 Weeks 

Palestinians flee the area of Tal al-Sultan in Rafah with their belongings following renewed Israeli strikes in the city in the southern Gaza Strip on May 28, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group. (AFP)
Palestinians flee the area of Tal al-Sultan in Rafah with their belongings following renewed Israeli strikes in the city in the southern Gaza Strip on May 28, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group. (AFP)
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UNRWA Says Around 1 Million People Have Fled Rafah in Past 3 Weeks 

Palestinians flee the area of Tal al-Sultan in Rafah with their belongings following renewed Israeli strikes in the city in the southern Gaza Strip on May 28, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group. (AFP)
Palestinians flee the area of Tal al-Sultan in Rafah with their belongings following renewed Israeli strikes in the city in the southern Gaza Strip on May 28, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group. (AFP)

Around one million people have fled the Gazan city of Rafah in the past three weeks, the United Nations Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) said on Tuesday.

The small city on the southern edge of the Gaza Strip had been sheltering more than a million Palestinians who fled Israeli assaults on other parts of the enclave.

Since early May, Israel's military has been carrying out what it says is a limited operation in Rafah to kill fighters and dismantle infrastructure used by Hamas, which runs Gaza. It has told civilians to go to an "expanded humanitarian zone" some 20 km (12 miles) away.

Many Palestinians have complained they are vulnerable to Israeli attacks wherever they go and have been moving up and down the Gaza Strip in the past few months.

UNRWA said the flight from Rafah "happened with nowhere safe to go and amidst bombardments, lack of food and water, piles of waste and unsuitable living conditions."

Providing assistance and protection is becoming nearly "impossible", the agency said.



Lebanese Army Receives Released Soldier Detained by Israel on Sunday

A Lebanese Army patrol. (EPA)
A Lebanese Army patrol. (EPA)
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Lebanese Army Receives Released Soldier Detained by Israel on Sunday

A Lebanese Army patrol. (EPA)
A Lebanese Army patrol. (EPA)

The Lebanese army on Thursday received a soldier who had been detained by Israel on Sunday, the army said in a post on X.
Israel had said on Tuesday it would release five Lebanese held by its military in a "gesture to the Lebanese president".
The army said the soldier was returned through the International Committee of the Red Cross and was transferred to a hospital for treatment, reported Reuters.
While the army did not identify the person released, it said on Sunday it had lost contact with one of its soldiers after he was shot while wearing civilian clothes by Israeli forces near the border in southern Lebanon and then was taken into Israel.
Lebanon received on Tuesday four detainees who had been detained by Israeli forces during the last war, the Lebanese presidency said.
Israel and Lebanon struck a truce deal brokered by Washington in November that ended more than a year of conflict between Israel's military and Lebanese armed group Hezbollah that was playing out in parallel with the Gaza war.
The four were not identified as soldiers.