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Saturday, December 06, 2025 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "debris" (3 articles)

Palestinians walk past the rubble of destroyed buildings, amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, November 19, 2025. REUTERS
Region

The gruelling search for Gaza's dead under the rubble

Standing beside the mound of rubble that was once his home, Ahmed Salim cannot hold back the tears as he struggles to retrieve the bodies of loved ones trapped underneath tonnes of debris. Over 30 people were killed when his home was struck, he told AFP, among them "my wife, my children, my mother, my father". "I'm the only one who survived," he said, pointing to the pile of broken concrete and twisted metal that was once a five-storey building in Gaza City's Zeitoun neighbourhood.The building was destroyed on December 24, 2024 and he has been waiting ever since to retrieve their bodies and give them a proper burial. "The only thing that matters to me is to be able to bury them," the 43-year-old said. After two years of war between Israel and Hamas that ravaged the Gaza Strip, thousands of other Palestinians are in a similar situation. According to UN data, as of late September, the Israeli military had damaged or destroyed around 83 % of the buildings in Gaza that stood prior the war.The densely-populated Palestinian territory is covered in 61.5mn tonnes of debris: nearly 170 times the weight of New York City's Empire State Building. Mahmud Bassal, spokesman for Gaza's civil defence agency, estimates that about 10,000 bodies are buried under the rubble. "We cannot extract thousands of bodies without heavy machinery. We need the means to lift the roofs and the tonnes of cement," said Bassal, whose organisation conducts search and rescue operations in Gaza.Iyad Rayan holds out the same hope as Salim: burying his wife and children with dignity. "My wife, my son Samir and my daughter Lana are still here under the rubble," he told AFP by the wreckage of his Gaza City home, which he said was destroyed in early October this year. "I want to send an appeal to the whole world: help me retrieve them," the 55-year-old said. Amal Abdel Aal is waiting for heavy equipment to enter the Gaza Strip so the bodies of her son and brother can be recovered.They have been under the rubble in the Sabra neighbourhood of Gaza City since the early days of the two-year war. "They never leave my thoughts. My heart aches at the thought of dogs reaching their bodies and eating them," said the 57-year-old woman now living in southern Gaza, where hundreds of thousands of people have sought shelter during the war. "I will only find relief when I have buried them, even if only a single bone remains." After the ceasefire began on October 10, Israel allowed Egyptian bulldozers to enter Gaza to help recover the remains of hostages, to be returned under the US-brokered truce deal."The world is unfair. We see bulldozers digging to retrieve the Israeli prisoners, while no one cares about the thousands of our martyrs," said Abdel Aal. 'SADNESS, LOSS AND PAIN' The October 2023 Hamas storming of Israel resulted in the war. Israel's retaliatory assault on Gaza killed more than 69,500 people, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory's health ministry that the UN considers reliable.Since the ceasefire, Palestinians have been able to recover around 500 bodies in areas that emergency workers could access following the partial withdrawal of Israeli forces, Bassal said. The halt in fighting allowed Amer Abu al-Tarabish to return to Beit Lahia in northern Gaza, he said, to extract the bodies of his parents from the ruins of their family home "with my bare hands". "My parents, my brother and his children, his wife, my uncle, his wife and their children... Thirty people remained under the rubble for more than a year," he said. "I pulled out their bodies intact; they were not decomposed," he recounted, adding that he was "overwhelmed by sadness, loss and pain". "I was able to bring them out one by one, say goodbye to them, and imprint their faces in my memory before burying them." For other Gaza residents, even this small consolation may never come.Bassal noted that thousands of people had been reported missing, especially during major population displacements as the fighting shifted. "We don't know whether they were killed or arrested" by Israeli forces, he said. As for families who buried their loved ones hastily during the war, many consider those graves to be temporary, or feel that proper rites have not yet been observed. Mohammed Naim, 47, said his family had to bury 43 relatives in just seven graves. "We placed the remains of each family in a single grave," he said. "But we swore over their graves that we would exhume them and rebury them, with dignity, in Gaza City."

Gulf Times
International

China postpones Shenzhou-20 return mission

The China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) announced that the return of the Shenzhou-20 crewed spacecraft, originally scheduled for today, will be postponed due to a suspected impact from a small piece of space debris.The impact analysis and risk assessment are under way, the CMSA said.The decision to postpone the return aims to ensure the safety of the astronauts and the success of the mission.The Shenzhou-20 crew had already completed the handover and takeover procedures in orbit with the Shenzhou-21 crew.

This aerial picture shows destroyed buildings in Gaza City's Al-Remal neighbourhood on Thursday. AFP
Region

Gaza buried under 61 million tonnes of rubble

After two years of war, Gaza is buried under more than 61 million tonnes of debris and three quarters of buildings have been destroyed, according to UN data analysed by AFP.The fragile ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, which came into effect on October 10 under pressure from US President Donald Trump, opens the way for the reconstruction of the devastated territory.This will require managing the immense amount of rubble.As of July 8, 2025, the Israeli army had damaged or destroyed nearly 193,000 buildings in the densely populated territory, representing about 78 percent of existing structures before the conflict began on October 7, 2023, according to satellite analysis by the United Nations' UNOSAT programme.In an assessment of images from September 22-23 of Gaza City, the UN agency estimated that an even higher proportion -- 83 percent -- of buildings there had been damaged or destroyed.The total 61.5 million tonnes of debris is nearly 170 times the weight of New York's Empire State Building and is equivalent to over 169 kilogrammes of debris for each square metre of Gaza's small territory.Nearly two-thirds of the debris was made in the first five months of the war, according to the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).The destruction of buildings also accelerated in the months leading up to the current ceasefire.Eight million tonnes of debris were generated from April to July 2025, mostly in the southern part of the territory between Rafah and Khan Yunis.A preliminary analysis published by UNEP in August warned the debris poses a serious health risk to the exposed population.The UN agency suggests that at least 4.9 million tonnes of debris could be contaminated with asbestos from old buildings, particularly near refugee camps such as those in Jabaliya in the north, Nuseirat and al-Maghazi in the centre, and Rafah and Khan Yunis in the south.UNEP also reports at least 2.9 million tonnes of debris could be contaminated with "hazardous waste from known industrial sites".