Hamas Blocks Gaza Evacuation With Threats and Violence: Terror Wave Spreads
Hamas uses threats and violence to stop Gaza residents from evacuating south, despite IDF warnings. Only 60-80k have fled, while Hamas uses civilians as human shields.
Despite two weeks of Israeli military efforts urging residents to leave Gaza City, Hamas is working aggressively to block evacuations, threatening civilians and using violence to keep them in place ahead of an expected large-scale IDF offensive.
Israeli defense officials estimate that only 60,000–80,000 people have managed to flee southward so far, out of roughly one million Palestinians still in the city. The majority remain trapped, as Hamas operatives seek to maximize civilian presence for two purposes: to serve as human shields against incoming strikes and to exploit civilian casualties for international pressure against Israel.
“Hamas sees the deaths of its own people as a strategic asset,” a senior Israeli defense source declared.
Threats, Violence, and Propaganda
According to intelligence assessments, Hamas uses multiple tactics to deter residents from leaving. Terror operatives have spread false claims that conditions in southern Gaza are far worse, with little access to tents, food, or medical care. Others have resorted to violence, beating or even shooting civilians attempting to flee.
At the same time, Hamas’s media arms push messages framing it as a “patriotic duty” for Palestinians to remain in Gaza City, even as the group prepares for the IDF’s expected advance.
While sporadic protests against Hamas emerged earlier this year, those demonstrations have since faded, with the group tightening its grip on most of the Strip. Some resistance remains among tribal clans and gangs, but Israeli officials say these pose only limited challenges to Hamas’s overall control.
IDF Prepares for Escalation
The IDF has prepared 100,000 tents to receive evacuees, alongside existing tent cities across Gaza already sheltering nearly one million Palestinians. Officials believe that while some 200,000 may initially remain in Gaza City, most civilians are likely to flee once artillery and aerial strikes intensify.
For now, the population remains caught between two forces: an Israeli military warning them to evacuate, and a ruling terror group determined to hold them in place, at almost any cost.