Israeli Military Operation Turns Jenin Refugee Camp into ‘Ghost Town’ 

Israeli soldiers walk inside Jenin refugee camp during an ongoing Israeli military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin, 03 February 2025. (EPA)
Israeli soldiers walk inside Jenin refugee camp during an ongoing Israeli military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin, 03 February 2025. (EPA)
TT
20

Israeli Military Operation Turns Jenin Refugee Camp into ‘Ghost Town’ 

Israeli soldiers walk inside Jenin refugee camp during an ongoing Israeli military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin, 03 February 2025. (EPA)
Israeli soldiers walk inside Jenin refugee camp during an ongoing Israeli military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin, 03 February 2025. (EPA)

An Israeli military operation in Jenin has turned the West Bank refugee camp into what residents and some officials describe as a ghost town, causing destruction on a scale not seen there for over 20 years.

Israel's military says the large-scale raid is aimed at suppressing Iranian-backed armed groups in Jenin, a Palestinian city in the north of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Two weeks after the military operation began, Jenin is largely deserted. Thousands of Palestinians have left their homes, taking only what they could carry, after Israel told them to leave through drones with loudspeakers. After destroying roadways and other infrastructure, Israeli forces demolished multiple buildings at the weekend, causing loud explosions.

"We stayed at home until the drone came to us and started calling for us to evacuate the house and evacuate the neighborhood because they wanted to carry out an explosion," said 39-year-old Khalil Huwail, a father of four who left with his family.

"We left in the clothes we were wearing. We couldn't carry anything, that was forbidden," he said. "The camp is completely empty."

After bulldozers and armored vehicles were deployed near his home, he said, residents trudged away along rubble-strewn roadways to an assembly point where Red Crescent vehicles awaited.

Israel's military said it had destroyed 23 structures and would "continue to operate to thwart terror wherever necessary."

From a hillside overlooking the camp, little could be seen apart from clouds of smoke and soldiers moving among the blackened walls of burnt-out houses. The operation, that latest stage of a raid launched last month, started after a ceasefire began in Israel's war in the Gaza Strip with the Hamas group.

UNRWA, the UN Palestinian relief agency, said the demolitions in Jenin "undermine the fragile ceasefire reached in Gaza, and risk a new escalation".

It said Jenin, a township for descendants of Palestinians who fled or were driven from their homes during the 1948 war around the creation of the state of Israel, "has been rendered a ghost town".

The refugee camp, long been a stronghold of armed groups including Hamas and Islamic Jihad, has been raided repeatedly over the years - not only by Israel's military but also by the Palestinian Administration.

In 2002, during the Second Intifada uprising, Israeli troops demolished hundreds of houses, displacing about a quarter of its population.

Jenin governor Kamal Abu al-Rub said the latest operation had left in the camp only about 100 people from the 3,490 families that had been there before it.

"The situation is worse than what happened in 2002 because the number of the displaced was lower then," he told Reuters.

COMPARISONS TO GAZA DESTRUCTION"

Israel has also been sweeping other areas of the West Bank, including the cities of Tubas and Tulkarm. At the start of the Jenin operation, Defense Minister Israel Katz said the army would apply lessons learned in the war in Gaza, more than 100 km (62 miles) to the south.

"If you didn't write Jenin camp on the pictures, people would think it's Gaza," al-Rub said of the destruction in Jenin. "Same picture, different location."

An attack on an Israeli military post near Tubas on Tuesday underlined tensions in the West Bank, where hundreds of Palestinians, including gunmen and uninvolved civilians, and dozens of Israelis have been killed since the Gaza war began.

Seventy Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank this year, including 38 in Jenin, the health ministry said.

Israeli officials say the West Bank is part of a multi-front campaign waged by Iran against Israel through proxies such as Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, and had long said Jenin risked becoming a "mini-Gaza".

Palestinians see Israel's operation, which began after Israel banned UNRWA from its headquarters in East Jerusalem, as an attempt to displace Palestinians from land they see as the core of a future state in a repeat of events in 1948 that they call the "Nakba", or catastrophe.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesperson for the Palestinian presidency, called the operation part of a wider effort aimed at "displacing citizens and ethnic cleansing" that had gained new focus since US President Donald Trump - who was due to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday - suggested Egypt and Jordan should take in Palestinians.

Jenin residents forced out of the camp remain defiant.

"We will go back to our homes, the Nakba will not return," said Khalil Huwail. "We will not migrate to another area."



Hamas Releases Video of Two Israeli Hostages Alive in Gaza

 A picture taken near Israel's border with Gaza shows smoke billowing in the besieged Palestinian territory on May 8, 2025, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
A picture taken near Israel's border with Gaza shows smoke billowing in the besieged Palestinian territory on May 8, 2025, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
TT
20

Hamas Releases Video of Two Israeli Hostages Alive in Gaza

 A picture taken near Israel's border with Gaza shows smoke billowing in the besieged Palestinian territory on May 8, 2025, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
A picture taken near Israel's border with Gaza shows smoke billowing in the besieged Palestinian territory on May 8, 2025, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)

Hamas's armed wing released a video on Saturday showing two Israeli hostages alive in the Gaza Strip, with one of the two men calling to end the 19-month-long war.

Israeli media identified the pair in the undated video as Elkana Bohbot and Yosef Haim Ohana, who were kidnapped during Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war.

The three-minute video released by Hamas's Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades shows one of the hostages, identified by media as 36-year-old Bohbot, visibly weak and lying on the floor wrapped in a blanket.

Bohbot, a Colombian-Israeli, was seen bound and injured in the face in video footage from the day of the Hamas attack. After a video of him was released last month, his family said they were "extremely concerned" about his health.

The second hostage, said to be Ohana, 24, speaks in Hebrew in the video, urging the Israeli government to end the war in Gaza and secure the release of all remaining captives -- a similar message to statements made by other hostages, likely under duress, in previous videos released by Hamas.

Bohbot and Ohana, both abducted by Palestinian gunmen from the site of a music festival, are among 58 hostages held in Gaza since the 2023 attack, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.

Hamas also holds the remains of an Israeli soldier killed in a 2014 war.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that the fate of three hostages presumed alive was unclear, without naming them.

"We know with certainty that 21 hostages are alive... and there are three others whose status, sadly, we do not know," Netanyahu said in a video shared on his Telegram channel.

Israel resumed its military offensive across the Gaza Strip on March 18, after a two-month truce that saw the release of dozens of hostages.

Since the ceasefire collapsed, Hamas has released several videos of hostages, including of the two appearing in Saturday's video.

Israel says the renewed offensive aims to force Hamas to free the remaining captives, although critics charge that it puts them in mortal danger.

Hamas's October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Saturday that at least 2,701 people have been killed since Israel resumed its campaign in Gaza, bringing the overall death toll since the war broke out to 52,810.