Unexploded bombs haunt Gazans amid fragile truce

by Tauqeer Abbas
39 views

Moein al-Hattu’s home lies in ruins—its cinder block walls shattered, debris scattered across the street, and a massive, unexploded bomb embedded in a damaged pillar, its tip resting ominously on a crushed dresser.

The bomb, weighing over a tonne, was dropped during an Israeli airstrike on Gaza City amid the fighting with Hamas. Though it failed to detonate, its presence looms as a constant threat.

“I’m living in fear and have no way to get rid of it,” al-Hattu told AFP, as children explored the wreckage, pausing to stare at the dangerous remnant.

The grey-bearded Palestinian hopes to hang tarps over what’s left of his home and return, but says no one in Gaza has the tools or expertise needed to safely remove the massive bomb.

“The relevant authorities, whether the civil defence or the municipality, say they can’t remove it. Who can I go to and complain to?” he demanded.

“If it had exploded, it would have caused massive destruction and destroyed at least five to six houses.”

After two years of war, the ruined cities of Gaza, a densely packed territory home to more than two million Palestinians, are littered with military debris, including unexploded, still-deadly munitions.

In the streets of Gaza City, children play with rocket parts and the tail fins of mortar shells, oblivious to or unbothered by the danger.

According to a study by charity Handicap International, Israel has dropped around 70,000 tonnes of explosives on targets in Gaza since Hamas’s October 7, 2023 cross-border attack triggered the drawn-out conflict.

CARDBOARD FOR COOKING

In January this year, the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) warned that between five and 10 percent of these bombs did not explode — leaving their deadly payloads to be recovered by militants or discovered by frightened residents.

At Gaza City’s Al-Shifa Hospital, Mohammed Nour sat beside a bed holding his two injured children.

The pair watched mute and glassy-eyed, their legs bound and skin flecked with shrapnel as he explained how they had been injured.

“We were setting up our tents and the boys went to look for wood, nylon and cardboard to burn to use for cooking,” Nour told AFP.

“About ten metres away from us, we suddenly saw boys being thrown by the explosion. We didn’t think they were our children and then we found them scattered in every corner.”

Nour’s sons may yet keep their limbs but in a nearby bed, six-year-old Yahya has lost part of his right hand and is all but covered in bandages. His grandfather Tawfiq al-Sharbasi sits by him, keeping vigil and strokes his hair.

“These are children. What did they do wrong? They were playing,” he said.

Jonathan Crickx, spokesman for UNICEF Palestine, told AFP it was very difficult to estimate how many children have been injured by unexploded ordnance.

“Following the recent ceasefire, we have recorded reports indicating that at least eight children were seriously injured by explosive remnants of war,” he said, adding that UN agencies are trying to raise awareness of the threat.

To date, no demining equipment has been authorised to enter the Gaza Strip by the Israeli army.

Source: Dunya News 

You may also like