
Palestinians fleeing south of Gaza, through an evacuation corridor established by the Israel Defense Forces, describes a harrowing reality in Gaza City, with constant airstrikes and no water.
A teenage girl said it felt like the "Nakba" or catastrophe of 2023 - the Arabic term for the expulsion of Palestinians from their cities during the establishment of Israel.
A man who did not give his name told a CNN reporter in southern Gaza that he and his neighbors had lived through "terrible days." He said they had left their home in northern Gaza and moved several times, but that it was impossible to escape the airstrikes.
"This war left nothing safe - not churches, not mosques or anything. Today, they dropped the leaflet ordering us to leave the supposed safe zone. We are now beyond this area of Wadi Gaza and still hearing shelling. There is no safe place in Gaza ," said one of the Palestinian evacuees.
" We are seven families. All our homes are gone. There is nothing left. We couldn't get anything – no clothes, no water, nothing. The road here was very difficult. If something falls, you are not allowed to pick it up. You are not allowed to slow down. Corpses everywhere ," confessed another.
The journalist said the flow of people on Salah Al-Deen Street leaving northern Gaza was much greater on Wednesday than on Tuesday. The UN estimates that on Tuesday, "up to 15,000 people may have passed" through the corridor. The IDF on Wednesday extended a four-hour ceasefire by one hour, due to the large number of people fleeing the south.
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