Egypt has insisted it will not allow any mass influx of refugees from Gaza into it to set a precedent for “the displacement of Palestinians from the West Bank into Jordan.”
Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi on Thursday when he met with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said Israel’s air strikes on the Rafah crossing, which is located between his nation and Gaza, led to the failure of aid delivery to the territory’s 2.4 million people.
The two leaders’ meeting took place in Gaza which has endured a brutal 13-day Israeli bombing in retribution for a shocking cross-border raid by Hamas on October 7 that left at least 1,400 people dead, the majority of them civilians and foreigners.
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi said, “The displacement of Palestinians from Gaza to Egypt means the same displacement will take place for Palestinians from the West Bank into Jordan.
“Subsequently, the Palestinian state that we are talking about, and that the world is talking about will become impossible to implement — because the land is there, but the people are not. Therefore, I warn of the danger of this matter,” Sisi added.
According to Sisi, “developments on the ground and the repeated bombings by Israel of the Palestinian side of the crossing have prevented its operation,” not that Egypt “did not close” the crossing.
Gaza is almost without fuel, food, water, or electricity, and about 3,000 people have died there. The only route to the besieged area that Israel does not control is via the Rafah crossing, and pressure has grown for aid to be permitted through there.