Palestinians should not flee to Egypt — UN refugees chief

Nearly 1.5 million displaced Palestinians - more than half of Gaza's population - are trapped in Rafah, seeking shelter in a sprawling makeshift encampment near the Egyptian border.

Displaced Palestinians camp near the border fence between Gaza and Egypt, on February 16, 2024 in Rafah, in southern Gaza, amid the ongoing Israeli brutal war on the tiny enclave.  / Photo: AFP
AFP

Displaced Palestinians camp near the border fence between Gaza and Egypt, on February 16, 2024 in Rafah, in southern Gaza, amid the ongoing Israeli brutal war on the tiny enclave.  / Photo: AFP

An exodus of Palestinians into Egypt from Gaza must be "avoided at all costs", and could be the "nail in the coffin" of a future peace process, the UN refugees chief said.

"The position of Egypt has been very clear. People should not go across the border. I think Egypt has very valid reasons," Filippo Grandi told BBC television from the Munich Security Conference on Friday.

"It would be catastrophic for Palestinians ... to be displaced again.''

"It would be catastrophic for Egypt from all points of view, and more important than anything else, a further refugee crisis would be almost the nail in the coffin of a future peace process already."

Like many observers, the United Nations high commissioner for refugees believes that once Palestinians leave Gaza they will no longer be able to return - as happened in 1948 - something which would ruin the possibility of a two-state solution between Israelis and the Palestinians.

The war accompanying the creation of Israel in 1948 saw 760,000 Palestinians flee or forced from their homes. Millions of their descendants continue to live as refugees in neighbouring countries.

"The old 1948 refugee crisis is an unresolved problem; if you add a dimension to that, you can say goodbye to a meaningful peace process," said Grandi.

"It has to be avoided at all costs."

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Growing pressure

Pressure has grown on Egypt to open its border to Palestinian civilians, as Israel plans to push ahead with a military operation in Rafah.

Grandi said his Geneva-based UNHCR agency was not involved in any preparations that Egypt might be making for if people cross the border.

But in any case, a refugee surge from Gaza into Egypt "needs to be avoided and it can only be avoided if humanitarian aid can enter Gaza in significant quantities - but more important, if hostilities cease", he said.

Since October 7, Israel launched a relentless military offensive that has killed more than 28,770 Palestinians in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in Gaza.

Grandi said the plight of displaced people in Rafah was "absolutely dramatic".

"So I hope that the appeals by the entire international community for a ceasefire and access of humanitarian aid and the liberation of hostages are heeded by the parties; by Israel, by Hamas."

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Israeli attacks in Gaza fuel 'catastrophic' medicine shortage

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