Evacuation to Gaza, leader of Hamas: No one leaves the country, no migration

Palestinian Islamic group leader Hamas said Palestinians would not leave Gaza or the West Coast to emigrate to Egypt. Ismail Hanyeh made the statement from an unknown country through a television address. There will be no migration from Gaza or the West Coast. No migration from Gaza to Egypt. ) [...]
Palestinian Islamic group leader Hamas said Palestinians would not leave Gaza or the West Coast to emigrate to Egypt. Ismail Hanyeh made the statement from an unknown country through a television address.
There will be no migration from Gaza or the West Coast. No migration from Gaza to Egypt. )
Hamas fighters launched death attacks on Israeli civilians and soldiers a week ago from the Gaza Strip. Israel warned over a million residents in the northern Gaza Strip to leave after threatening to launch a ground offensive in enclaves.
The situation has alarmed Egypt, which shares a border with Gaza like other Arab states. Egypt has said Palestinians must stay on their lands as the war escalates and that it is working to secure the delivery of aid to the Gaza Strip.
And here, I would also like to welcome the attitude of our brothers in Egypt who say Egypt is really our brother and a refuge welcoming the Palestinian people, but not because of migration or exile. None of us can accept that. And I tell the brothers and sisters in Egypt, our decision is to stay in our country. And standing in front of the syonist plan supported by the American administration, we'll make it fail, by God's will. “
Hamas' leader hopes for the support of Muslim countries but also highlights the support of the people of Palestine who are being given through protests on the American and European continent, through which the call is made for the people of Palestine.
Israel says the evacuation order is a humanitarian gesture to protect its inhabitants from harm, while uprooting Hamas' fighters. The United Nations says that so many people cannot safely move into the surrounded enclave without causing a humanitarian disaster.
Hundreds of thousands of Gaza's 2.3 million inhabitants have fled their homes. The fate of Palestinian refugees is one of the thorniest issues in the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. Palestinians and Arab states say an agreement should include the right of those refugees and their descendants to return, something Israel opposes.












