Canadian man in Gaza describes chaotic conditions while hoping for border to open
A Canadian man in southern Gaza says essential supplies are running short as conditions become more desperate in the area where he has been taking shelter while waiting for a border crossing with Egypt to open.
Mahmoud Nasser says he left Gaza City with his wife amid Israel’s retaliatory bombing of the Palestinian territory last week and is now in the southern city of Khan Yunis, where he and 59 other people, including children, have crammed into a home belonging to his wife’s relatives.
Nasser says food and water are being rationed, electricity is scarce and every home in the area is crowded with people who have fled northern Gaza ever since Israel ordered a mass evacuation ahead of an expected ground invasion.
He says he has been in touch with Canadian embassy staff and is awaiting a call with details on how to evacuate, possibly through the nearby Rafah crossing with Egypt, the only passage out of Gaza that does not lead into Israel.