Friday, 30 August 2024

Inside the sealed-off Jenin refugee camp targeted by IDF

 The messages come through on the Israeli phone network - scraps of information from inside Jenin’s refugee camp.

"I don’t dare go on the roof, in case I’m shot," one resident says, speaking anonymously.

Information inside the camp is scarce, he says, and the streets are empty, as residents stay inside.

"It’s mostly old people and children here," he tells me. "The young people left before the army arrived – it’s bad luck for those who can’t get out."

Jenin, the focus of news networks today, has been living through a news blackout.

The Palestinian phone network was down for much of the day - lines cut by the Israeli military operation here, the telecoms company said.

The resident I speak to says his family still has water and electricity, and that a small shop nearby was open and selling supplies, under the constant buzz of military drones.

As we talk, a few scattered gunshots reverberate over the rooftops from the direction of the camp.

"Yes, I heard them too," he says. "The sound of the drones has increased."

As he is speaking, an armoured bulldozer rumbles towards one of the camp’s main entrances, the road deserted and baking in the afternoon sun.

For a few hours last night, explosions and gunfire erupted from the alleyways there, disrupting sleep.

But since then, this man says it had been largely quiet - with no sign of house-to-house searches in his neighbourhood, nor of fighters from the camp.

"It’s abnormally quiet," he said.

The camp has been sealed off by the army since it arrived before dawn on Wednesday - part of a wide, coordinated operation across several centres of the occupied West Bank.

Jenin camp is a base for armed Palestinian fighters, but also unarmed civilians. There have been fierce gun battles here in recent months, as Israeli forces have raided, again and again, looking for them.

Army vehicles are also stationed around two of Jenin’s main hospitals.

Ambulances are stopped as they approach - approaching and reversing in response to terse instructions broadcast in Arabic from loudspeakers on the army Jeeps.

We watched paramedics get out to open the back doors of their ambulance, to show what - or who - was inside. Two female patients were also made to get out and present themselves to soldiers in the Jeeps.

The Israeli army search an ambulance outside a hospital during a military operation in the West Bank city of Jenin, 29 August 2024Image source,EPA
Image caption,

The Israeli army seen searching an ambulance outside a hospital in Jenin on Thursday

Behind them, one of Jenin’s main commercial districts is shuttered and deserted. Cardboard boxes are scattered across the empty road; fruit sits abandoned on carts under thin cotton covers - the sickly-sweet smell of rotting mangoes fills the silent street.

One small grocery shop has been opening in the afternoon – an urban oasis for those who can reach it.

FULL ARTICLE AT: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c8ergpxnd8xo

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