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"Israeli forces have asked us to leave our homes and go towards South Gaza. I am leaving too. Please pray for us,” 52-year-old Kashmiri woman Lubna Nazir Wani Toman told The Quint a few minutes before she was forced to evacuate her home in Gaza City.
In an unprecedented move, the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) on Friday, 13 October, told almost half the population on the Gaza Strip to evacuate northern Gaza and move southwards within 24 hours “for their own safety and protection.”
Meanwhile, Farida (name changed to protect identity), a Palestinian humanitarian worker living in Gaza City, told The Quint:
Hailing from Srinagar in Jammu and Kashmir, Lubna has lived in conflict-ridden Gaza since 1997. "But this time, the situation is different," she told The Quint two days back, describing the round-the-clock retaliatory attack by Israel against Hamas on the Gaza Strip.
Now, following the IDF’s announcement on Friday, Lubna spoke to The Quint again. As she prepared to evacuate, she said, “We are not safe, bombs are raining down on us.”
Meanwhile, her brother Sohail Nazir Wani said that his sister is among 1.2 million Gazans who are moving to some other area “as we speak.”
“I called the Delhi control center again and gave them her number,” Sohail said, adding that he has not heard back from any of the authorities since he first reached out to them.
However, at the MEA weekly press briefing on Thursday, 12 October, when spokesperson Arindam Bagchi was asked about "a Kashmiri lady stranded in Gaza whose husband is Palestinian," he said:
“However, there are currently some constraints in directly bringing them out, but we are making efforts to provide solution and will provide whatever assistance we can,” he added.
The Quint was redirected to the above statement when we reached out to the MEA.
As the war enters its seventh day, at least 1,300 civilians and soldiers have lost their lives in Israel, according to the country's military, while the Palestinian health ministry said that 1,400 have been killed – including at least 447 children – and over 6,000 have been injured.
In a statement accessed by The Quint, the IDF said:
It further ordered Palestinian “civilians” not to approach “area of the security fence of Israel,” claiming that Hamas militants are “hiding in Gaza City, inside tunnels, underneath houses and inside buildings populated with innocent civilians…”
In response to the IDF's directive, CNN on Friday, 13 October reported that Hamas told Gaza residents not to leave their homes, accusing Israel of “psychological warfare”.
“The occupation is attempting to spread and circulate false propaganda through various means, aiming to create confusion among citizens and undermine the stability of our internal front,” Hamas' statement said. The Quint has not independently verified the statement.
Meanwhile, the United Nations (UN) sounded the alarm on Israel's directive. UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric warned that the evacuation order was "impossible" to implement without "devastating humanitarian consequences".
The UN also stated that it was informed of the directive just before midnight (local time) on Thursday, 12 October.
However, the country has not yet officially announced its decision to launch a ground offensive against Palestine.
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