Gaza, Israel and Yellow Line
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The military said that the terrorists were killed while attempting to cross the Yellow Line and approach troops stationed in the area. IDF soldiers killed two terrorists in the central Gaza Strip who were attempting to cross the Yellow Line and approach troops stationed in the area,
Several ministers pushed back on the idea, including Gila Gamliel, Orit Strock, Ze’ev Elkin and Miri Regev, claiming that it wouldn’t be safe for such a city to exist on the Israeli side of the Yellow Line, according to Ynet.
Meanwhile, sources told Al-Jazeera that mediators are in contact with both Hamas and Israel to secure the safe exit of the fighters stranded beyond the so-called “yellow line” — the de facto boundary separating areas under Israeli military control from those under Palestinian administration following the October 10 ceasefire.
This is one of several incidents in the past days in which Hamas members, in violation of the ceasefire between Israel and the terror group, attempt to cross over the Yellow Line. A terrorist was killed after he was identified crossing Gaza's Yellow Line and approaching IDF soldiers in the northern Gaza Strip,
Envisioned as a temporary boundary under the first phase of the agreement, the line has instead become a flashpoint in the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
The Israeli army said Tuesday that it had killed a Palestinian man in the northern Gaza Strip for allegedly crossing the so-called “yellow line” despite a ceasefire agreement. In a statement, the army claimed that the Palestinian posed an “imminent threat” after he allegedly crossed the yellow line and approached soldiers in northern Gaza.
A small sense of normalcy has returned in some areas of Gaza, but other parts remain under Israeli military control, fuelling concerns the strip is being divided.
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Reporting amid the ruins at Gaza's 'yellow line'
We have an insight into what's happening inside the Gaza Strip. It is a controlled access with the Israel military, but nontheless it's a rare chance to take a critical first hand look at the so-called "yellow line" buffer zone that Palestinians have to navigate around,