Freezing rain floods Gaza camps as displaced Palestinians face even worse situations | EUROtoday

Heavy rain lashed the Gaza Strip this weekend, flooding makeshift encampments with ankle-deep puddles as displaced Palestinians struggled to remain dry. Tents, frayed by months of use, had been inundated, with muddy water soaking blankets and mattresses in camps like Khan Younis.

Fragile shelters had been propped up with salvaged wooden. Children, ill-suited in flip-flops and light-weight clothes, waded via freezing puddles that turned filth roads into rivers. Some residents desperately used shovels to clear water from their momentary properties.

“We drowned last night,” said Majdoleen Tarabein, a woman displaced from Rafah in southern Gaza. “Puddles formed, and there was a bad smell. The tent flew away. We don’t know what to do or where to go.”

She showed blankets and the remaining contents of the tent, completely soaked and covered in mud, as she and family members tried to wring them dry by hand.

“When we woke up in the morning, we found that the water had entered the tent,” said Eman Abu Riziq, also displaced in Khan Younis, as she pointed to a puddle just outside. “These are the mattresses — they are all completely soaked. My daughters’ belongings were soaked. The water is entering from here and there,” she said, gesturing toward the ceiling and the corners of the tent. Her family is still reeling from her husband’s recent death, and the constant struggle to stay dry in the winter rains.

At least 12 people, including a 2-week-old infant, have died since Dec. 13 from hypothermia or weather-related collapses of war-damaged homes, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, part of the Hamas-run government.

Emergency workers warned people not to stay in damaged buildings because they could collapse at any moment. But so much of the territory reduced to rubble, there are few places to escape the rain. In July, the United Nations Satellite Center estimated that almost 80% of the buildings in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged.

Since a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas went into effect on Oct. 11, 414 people have been killed and 1,142 wounded in Gaza, according to the Health Ministry. The overall Palestinian death toll from the war has risen to at least 71,266. The ministry, which does not distinguish between militants and civilians in its count, is staffed by medical professionals and maintains detailed records viewed as generally reliable by the international community.

Palestinians receive donated food at a temporary camp for displaced people, on the beach near the port of Gaza City, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) (Copyright 2025, The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Aid deliveries into Gaza are falling far short of the amount called for under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire, according to an Associated Press analysis of the Israeli military’s figures. The Israeli military body in charge of humanitarian aid said in the past week that 4,200 trucks full of humanitarian aid entered Gaza, plus eight garbage trucks to assist with sanitation, as well as tents and winter clothing as part of the winterization efforts. But it refused to elaborate on the number of tents. Humanitarian aid groups have said the need far outstrips the number of tents that have entered.

Since the ceasefire began, approximately 72,000 tents and 403,000 tarps have entered, according to the Shelter Cluster, an international coalition of aid providers led by the Norwegian Refugee Council.

“Harsh winter weather is compounding more than two years of suffering. People in Gaza are surviving in flimsy, waterlogged tents and among ruins. There is nothing inevitable about this. Aid supplies are not being allowed in at the scale required,” Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner-general of the top U.N. group overseeing aid in Gaza, wrote on X.

A Palestinian child carries a bag of flour on his back at a makeshift camp on the beach, in Gaza City, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) (Copyright 2025, The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu traveled to Washington to fulfill with U.S. President Donald Trump in Florida in regards to the second stage of the ceasefire. Netanyahu is predicted to fulfill with Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Monday.

Though the ceasefire settlement has principally held over the previous 2 1/2 months, its progress has slowed. Israel has stated it refuses to maneuver on to the following stage of the ceasefire whereas the stays of the ultimate hostage killed within the assault on Oct. 7, 2023, that sparked the struggle are nonetheless in Gaza. Challenges within the subsequent part of the ceasefire embrace the deployment of a global stabilization power, a technocratic governing physique for Gaza, the disarmament of Hamas and additional Israeli troop withdrawals from the territory.

Both Israel and Hamas have accused one another of truce violations.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/gaza-floods-palestine-weather-rain-b2891209.html