Gaza–Egypt border

The Gaza–Egypt border is the 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) long border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt. There is a buffer zone along the border, called the Philadelphi Route, which is about 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) long.

Gaza Strip

The Rafah Border Crossing is the only crossing point between Egypt and the Gaza Strip. It is located on the international border that was confirmed in the 1979 Israel–Egypt Peace Treaty. Only passage of persons takes place through the Rafah Border Crossing. All goods traffic must use the Kerem Shalom border crossing on the Israel–Gaza border.

Background

On 1 October 1906, the Ottoman and British governments agreed on a boundary between Ottoman ruled Palestine and British ruled Egypt, running from Taba to Rafah.[1] Although after World War I Palestine was also under British control, the Egypt-Palestine boundary was maintained to control the movement of the local Bedouin.[1] From 1948, Gaza was occupied by an independent Egypt. Consequently, the border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt proper was a mere administrative boundary without border control. In the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel conquered the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip from Egypt, and again there was nominal border control.

In 1979, Israel and Egypt signed a peace treaty that returned the Sinai, which borders the Gaza Strip, to Egyptian control. As part of that treaty, a 100-meter-wide strip of land, known as the Philadelphi Route, was established as a buffer zone between the Gaza Strip and Egypt.[2] In the peace treaty, the re-created Gaza–Egypt border was drawn across the city of Rafah. When Israel withdrew from the Sinai in 1982, Rafah was divided into Egyptian and Palestinian parts, splitting up families, separated by barbed-wire barriers.[1][3]

Buffer zone by Israel

Under the 1979 Egyptian–Israeli Peace Treaty, the Philadelphi Route buffer zone was a 100-meter-wide strip of land along the Gaza-Egypt border. Until 2000, the actual buffer zone was 20–40 meters wide with a 2.5 to 3 meters high concrete wall topped with barbed wire.[4]

During the Second Intifada, which began in 2000, Israel widened the buffer zone to 200–300 meters and built a barrier wall mostly of corrugated sheet metal, with stretches of concrete topped with barbed wire.[5] The construction of the buffer zone required the demolition of entire blocks of houses at the main entrance to Rafah's central thoroughfare.[4]

2001–03 expansion

Demolition of Palestinian houses in Rafah, March 2003

Since 2001, the IDF demolished Palestinian houses in Rafah to create the buffer zone. In 2002, hundreds of houses in Rafah were destroyed to widen the buffer zone and for the building of an eight meter high and 1.6 kilometers long metal wall along the border. The wall also extended two meters underground. The wall was built about 80–90 meters from the border, which doubled the width of the patrol corridor. After the metal wall was completed in early 2003, demolitions continued and even increased dramatically.[4]

2004 expansion, Operation Rainbow

After the death on 12 May 2004 of 5 Israeli soldiers who were operating in the buffer zone, the Israel government approved on 13 May a plan to further widen the buffer zone, which would require the demolition of hundreds of homes.[6] The Israeli military recommended demolishing all homes within 300 meters of its positions, or about 400 meters from the border. The plan elicited strong international criticism.

On 14 May, a large IDF force entered the "Brazil block" of Rafah and in heavy fighting, as reported by UNWRA, 12 Palestinians were killed and 52 injured. Israeli forces began demolishing houses in the Qishta neighborhood. and destroyed scores of houses.[4][7] Around midnight the same day, the Israeli High Court of Justice issued an interim order, temporarily barring the IDF from demolishing homes in the refugee camp, if the action was not part of "a regular military operation".[6] Nevertheless, the IDF continued the destruction of homes until 15 May 5:00 a.m. because of "immediate military necessity, a risk to soldiers, or a hindrance to a military operation",[8] raising the number of destroyed houses to just over 100.[7]

On 16 May, the High Court ruled that the IDF may destroy homes according to their needs; the IDF had pledged that it would refrain from unnecessarily demolishing houses.[9][10] The next day, Israel started "Operation Rainbow".

On 18 May, the Israel government declared that the plan to widen a buffer zone along the Egyptian border was cancelled,[11] while the same day the army massively invaded Rafah and continued its large-scale destruction.[7] On 19 May 2004, the United Nations Security Council condemned the killing of Palestinian civilians and the demolition of homes.[11]

Between 1 April 2003 and 30 April 2004, 106 houses were demolished in Rafah.[12] According to HRW, the IDF’s justifications for the destruction were doubtful and rather consistent with the goal of having a wide and empty border area to facilitate long-term control over the Gaza Strip.[4]

2005 expansion

An army plan to dig a moat along the border was dropped in 2005 after it became clear that it would likely be rejected by Israel's Attorney General, Menachem Mazuz, because it required the destruction of 3,000 more homes in Rafah.[13][14] Instead, the IDF started the building of a 7–9 meters high (about 20–30 feet) concrete wall along the border in a 60–100 meter (about 200–300 feet) wide security strip, equipped with electronic sensors and underground concrete barriers to prevent tunneling.[13]

Buffer zone by Egypt

2009 Egyptian steel wall

In December 2009, Egypt started with help from the US, the building of an Egypt–Gaza barrier along the Gaza border, consisting of a steel wall.

2013–15 Egyptian demolition of homes and smuggling tunnels

In October 2014 Egypt announced that they planned to expand the buffer zone between Gaza and Egypt, following a terrorist attack from Gaza that killed 31 Egyptian soldiers.[15] The buffer was created "in a move meant to halt the passage of weapons and militants through cross-border smuggling tunnels but which also puts more pressure on the Palestinian militant Hamas group."[16]

Egyptian authorities ordered residents living along the country's eastern border to evacuate their homes prior to their demolishing. The buffer zone will include water-filled trenches to thwart tunnel diggers and will be 500 meter wide and extended along the 13 km border.[17] Following the announcement of Ibrahim Mahlab, the Prime Minister of Egypt, that any residents unwilling to move willfully would be forcefully removed from their homes, many residents left the area.[18] On 17 November 2014, Egypt announced that the buffer zone would be doubled to 1 km due to the longer than expected tunnels discovered.[19]

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas agreed with the operation, arguing that the smuggling tunnels under the border had produced 1,800 millionaires, and were used for smuggling weapons, drugs, cash and equipment for forging documents. Abbas had previously recommended the sealing or destruction of the tunnels by flooding them and then punishing the owners of the homes that contained entrances to the tunnels, including demolishing their homes.[20][21]

On 8 January 2015, Egypt's expansion resulted in the destruction of about 1,220 homes,[22] while destroying more than 1,600 tunnels.[23] Some tunnels discovered ranged over 1 kilometer long and contained lighting, ventilation and phone systems.[24] The total cost of this phase of the buffer zone is expected to cost $70 million.[25] In February 2015, in response to the buffer zone, ISIS beheaded 10 men they believed were spies for Mossad and the Egyptian Army.[26]

In June 2015, Egypt completed its digging of a ditch at the Rafah Crossing Point, 20 meters wide by 10 meters deep. It is located two kilometers from the border with Gaza outside of Rafah City and part of the enlarged buffer zone. Expansion of the trench along with watchtowers was planned.[27][28]

On 11 September 2015, the Egyptian army began to pump water from the Mediterranean Sea into the tunnels. According to the Egyptian president Abdel Fatah Al-Sisi, flooding of the tunnels had been carried out in coordination with the Palestinian Authority.[21] A number of Palestinian factions condemned the flooding of the border with sea water, because it posed a serious threat to environment and ground water.[29] In November 2015, indeed large areas of soil collapsed as a result of the flooding, threatening Gazan homes in Rafah near the Saladin Gate.[30] Salty water flowed out from the ground, contaminating the soil and make it unusable for agriculture. The seawater further damages the natural aquifers, "already depleted by the Israelis, who dig wells thousands of metres deeper than ours,”.[31]

According to Human Rights Watch, the Egyptian authorities demolished between July 2013 and August 2015 at least 3,255 residential, commercial, administrative, and community buildings along the border, forcibly evicting thousands of people.[32]

Rafah Border Crossing

Salah al-Din Gate in Rafah[33]

The Rafah Border Crossing is the only crossing point between Egypt and the Gaza Strip. It lies on the international border that was confirmed by the 1979 Israel–Egypt Peace Treaty and the 1982 Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula. The Rafah Border Crossing can only be used for the passage of persons. All goods traffic must use the Kerem Shalom border crossing on the Israel-Gaza border.

The crossing was managed by the Israel Airports Authority until Israel evacuated Gaza on 11 September 2005 as part of Israel's unilateral disengagement plan. It subsequently became the task of the European Union Border Assistance Mission Rafah (EUBAM) to monitor the crossing.

See also

References

  1. The Evolution of the Egypt-Israel Boundary: From Colonial Foundations to Peaceful Borders. Pages 3, 9, 18. Nurit Kliot, Boundary and Territory Briefing, volume 1, number 8 (free full-text PDF). A partial preview of the paper is also available through Google Books.
  2. Shen, Nina (2008-01-25). "Gaza: The Basics. Some history and background on the Gaza Strip". Slate.com.
  3. Cinderella in Rafah. Al-Ahram, Issue No. 761, 22 - 28 September 2005
  4. Razing Rafah — Mass Home Demolitions in the Gaza Strip, pp. 27-28 and 52-66 (PDF text version) on , Summary:. The report on refworld:. Human Rights Watch (HRW), October 2004
  5. We Are No Longer Able to See the Sun. Andrew Rubin, Al Ahram Weekly, 7 July 2007
  6. High Court to renew debate on IDF house demolitions in Rafah. Haaretz, 14 May 2004
  7. Supplementary Appeal for Rafah. UNWRA, May 2004
  8. Razing Rafah, par. Map 5 : IDF Operations in Rafah May 2004, Box 3 — Destruction in Rafah: Shifting Justifications. HRW, October 2004
  9. Court rejects petition to prevent further Rafah demolitions. Haaretz, 16 May 2004. On web.archive.org/
    The three-member High Court panel said that the IDF was entitled to carry out such demolitions along the Philadelphi route for security reasons, "according to operational needs" or if the military determined that soldiers' lives were in danger.
  10. Rafah residents flee their homes. Maariv, 16 May 2004. On web.archive.org/
  11. Demolitions in Gaza to end: Israel tells US Archived 2013-10-12 at the Wayback Machine. AFP, 20 May 2004
  12. PCHR, Uprooting Palestinian Trees And Leveling Agricultural Land – The tenth Report on Israeli Land Sweeping and Demolition of Palestinian Buildings and Facilities in the Gaza Strip 1 April 2003 – 30 April 2004 On Archived 2013-10-02 at the Wayback Machine
  13. Army building new Gaza barrier. Ynet, 14 May 2005
  14. Israel changes anti-smuggling tactics. Associated Press/USA Today, 2 March 2005
  15. Egypt begins Gaza border evacuation to create security buffer - Retrieved 29 October 2014
  16. Egypt to clear residents from Gaza border. Al Jazeera, 29 October 2014
  17. Egypt clears Gaza border area to create security buffer. Reuters, 29 October 2014
  18. Egypt to expand buffer zone with Gaza after longer tunnels found - Retrieved 17 November 2014
  19. Abbas: Egypt Right to Create Buffer Zone on Gaza Border Archived August 20, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Jack Khoury, Haaretz, 1 December 2014 (premium).
    ″Abbas believed the destruction of the tunnels was the best solution. The Palestinian president said he had recommended previously the sealing or destruction of the tunnels by flooding them and then punishing the owners of the homes that contained entrances to the tunnels, including demolishing their homes.″
  20. Sisi says Gaza tunnels flooded in coordination with PA Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. MEMO, 28 September 2015
  21. Egyptian military doubling buffer zone with Gaza , demolishing nearly 1,220 more homes. Associated Pres, 8 January 2015
  22. http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=22881
  23. First phase of Egypt-Gaza buffer zone to cost $70 million
  24. Sinai terrorists linked with ISIS decapitate 10 alleged Israeli spies
  25. Egypt builds trench along Gaza border to prevent smuggling. Ma'an News Agency, 22 June 2015
  26. Egypt reportedly completes Rafah border ditch
  27. Palestinian factions condemn Egypt flooding Gaza borders. MEMO, 21 September 2015
  28. Landslides in Gaza after Egypt floods border. MEMO, 4 November 2015
  29. Egyptian army contaminates Palestinian soil on Gaza border. Motasem A Dalloul, MEMO, 20 November 2015
  30. “Look for Another Homeland”. Human Rights Watch, September 2015
  31. Razing Rafah, Map 2: Rafah Features. HRW, October 2004


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