After celebrations, displaced Gazans return home to destruction

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Celebrations erupt in war-torn Gaza as 15-month-long Israeli atrocity finally ends

GAZA, Jan 19 (AFP/APP): Columns of people hundreds strong were making their way northward from Gaza City to Jabalia on Sunday, flanked on both sides by countless buildings turned to rubble, as a ceasefire took effect in the Palestinian territory.

                  In places, they crossed an ashen landscape, heaped with pulverised concrete and studded with the skeletons of ruined buildings.

                  They walked through a haze of dust raised by the movement of hundreds of feet and vehicles over sandy soil on roads stripped of their paving.

                  In parts where the pavement remained, it was covered by layers of dust and debris.

                  “We came here at six in the morning to find massive, unprecedented destruction,” said Walid Abu Jiab, a displaced Gazan who returned to his home in Jabalia.

                  “There is nothing left in the north worth living for,” he told AFP.

                  On either side of the road, former apartment buildings lay collapsed after months of Israeli shelling and air strikes during a military operation focused intently on the north of the Palestinian territory.

                  Fuad Abu Jilboa, another displaced resident of Jabalia, described the scene upon his return home as “indescribable destruction, unlike anything history has ever witnessed before or since”.

                  – ‘I’m going to Rafah’ –

                  Despite the damage, Sunday gave way to scenes of joy and jubilation, despite the ceasefire being delayed by several hours.

                  In the southern city of Khan Yunis, crowds gathered in the streets and cheered as armed men paraded in pick-ups, Kalashnikov assault rifles held aloft, firing into the air in celebration.

                  Hundreds of people gathered at a junction playing drums, waving Palestinian flags and chanting.

                  “This joy is more beautiful than the joy of Eid, and this is the most beautiful pleasure,” a man told AFP from the window of his car, which was packed with his family and all his belongings.

                  “I’m going to Rafah,” he added excitedly, even as his car was forced to a complete stop by the mass of celebrating Palestinians.

                  In Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city, people began returning in droves before the ceasefire even went into effect, with Israel having delayed the implementation by nearly three hours, saying it had not received a list of hostages to be released by Hamas.

                  The war in Gaza was sparked by the militant group’s surprise October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

                  Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 46,913 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.