ABC NewsFor the people of Gaza, there s a common exhaustion that many express exhausted by the war, of living in such dire conditions, by the death that surrounds them.
"We are tired of this living," Muhammad Jawad Ibrahim Al-Barbari, a 46-year-old employee at Gaza International Airport, told ABC News in an interview last Friday, the day the week-long temporary cease-fire ended between Israel and Hamas.
Al-Barbari and his family had to leave their home in Al-Zahraa city in northern Gaza after it was bombed by the Israeli military. They moved south to Khan Yunis, and for the last six weeks have been living in a tent in a United Nations-run shelter.
He shares the tent with his other relatives, three families crammed in together. The conditions are bleak, he said. Al-Barbari said food and water are scarce, and his tent was even flooded with sewage.
To be honest, I am having a crisis," he said.
He is not alone. The UN estimates there are now 1.9 million people displac
Some besieged Gazans say they face no future there, want to leave for good
centralmoinfo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from centralmoinfo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Some besieged Gazans say they face no future there, want to leave for good
go.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from go.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ABC NewsFor the people of Gaza, there s a common exhaustion that many express exhausted by the war, of living in such dire conditions, by the death that surrounds them.
"We are tired of this living," Muhammad Jawad Ibrahim Al-Barbari, a 46-year-old employee at Gaza International Airport, told ABC News in an interview last Friday, the day the week-long temporary cease-fire ended between Israel and Hamas.
Al-Barbari and his family had to leave their home in Al-Zahraa city in northern Gaza after it was bombed by the Israeli military. They moved south to Khan Yunis, and for the last six weeks have been living in a tent in a United Nations-run shelter.
He shares the tent with his other relatives, three families crammed in together. The conditions are bleak, he said. Al-Barbari said food and water are scarce, and his tent was even flooded with sewage.
To be honest, I am having a crisis," he said.
He is not alone. The UN estimates there are now 1.9 million people displac
ABC NewsFor the people of Gaza, there s a common exhaustion that many express exhausted by the war, of living in such dire conditions, by the death that surrounds them.
"We are tired of this living," Muhammad Jawad Ibrahim Al-Barbari, a 46-year-old employee at Gaza International Airport, told ABC News in an interview last Friday, the day the week-long temporary cease-fire ended between Israel and Hamas.
Al-Barbari and his family had to leave their home in Al-Zahraa city in northern Gaza after it was bombed by the Israeli military. They moved south to Khan Yunis, and for the last six weeks have been living in a tent in a United Nations-run shelter.
He shares the tent with his other relatives, three families crammed in together. The conditions are bleak, he said. Al-Barbari said food and water are scarce, and his tent was even flooded with sewage.
To be honest, I am having a crisis," he said.
He is not alone. The UN estimates there are now 1.9 million people displac