Since breaking the ceasefire, Israel issued nearly one displacement order every two days, strangling people into isolated areas, covering less than 20 percent of the Gaza Strip
Israel has used mass forced displacement and relentless military assault to systematically force civilians into five restricted zones—hemmed in by military corridors and the sea—that now make up less than 20 percent of Gaza. Combined with deliberate deprivation, this reveals a strategy not of targeting militants, but of dismantling and erasing Gaza itself, Oxfam warned today.
A new Oxfam analysis found that since breaking the ceasefire on March 18, Israel has issued over 30 forced displacement orders—nearly one every two days- covering a swathe of 68 out of 79 neighbourhoods, some multiple times. These, together with the expanding "no-go" Israeli military zones, make up over 80 percent of the Gaza Strip. The cumulative effect is the de facto confinement of the population into overcrowded, infrastructure-stripped enclaves.
The sheer scale and relentless frequency of these orders have made it virtually impossible for people to find refuge. The pattern suggests not an effort to neutralise a threat, but a deliberate campaign to dismantle and depopulate Gaza—a process of forced displacement which is a war crime.
Meanwhile, Israel has extended its military presence along five so called "security corridors"—Philadelphi, Murag, Kisufim, Netzarim, and Mefalsim—that cut horizontally across the length of the Gaza Strip. These corridors effectively divide the territory into five isolated zones, severing north from south and restricting civilian movement within what is already a tightly confined space.
Bushra Khalidi, Oxfam's Policy Lead in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, said:
"For over 600 days, Israel has been saying it's targeting Hamas, but it is civilians who have been corralled, bombed and killed en masse every day. The displacement orders follow a clear and calculated pattern: using the threat of violence to herd civilians into ever-shrinking zones of confinement. This isn't counterterrorism, as Israel alleges —it's the systematic clearing of Gaza through militarised force into enclaves of internment."
The pattern of Israel's orders followed by military strikes underscores what Israeli officials have openly stated: plans to take control of Gaza and establish militarised "humanitarian" hubs, where civilians would receive aid from private contractors under armed guard. Oxfam and other international agencies have firmly rejected these proposals as coercive, politicised, and incompatible with humanitarian principles.
In just the last week (15–20 May), over 160,000 people were displaced—part of a broader total of nearly 600,000 people displaced since March 18, many of them repeatedly.
One of the most significant recent orders, issued on 20 May, covered 34.9 km², roughly 10 percent of Gaza's land area, that uprooted 150,000–200,000 people in North Gaza's Beit Lahiya and Jabalia. The effect of such orders on already-displaced populations has been devastating.
"In any other conflict, civilians would have routes to flee to neighbouring areas or countries. In this case, Palestinians are entirely caged under an iron-clad siege, being shoved towards the coastline."
Fidaa Alaraj – Oxfam's Gender Advisor in Gaza- who has been displaced with her family several times, said:
"Imagine trying to move with four children or an elderly parent in the middle of the night, with no transport and nowhere to go. People are so exhausted, many would rather face death than flee again."
The so-called "known shelters" designated by Israel—chief among them Al-Mawasi—are little more than dust-choked encampments that offer no real protection. Al-Mawasi, a barren coastal strip of roughly 40 square kilometre that housed just 7,000 people before the war, has now been designated as a relocation site for hundreds of thousands. Despite its label as a safe zone, it has been repeatedly struck by Israeli fire.
Nearly all of the remaining areas where civilians are being forcibly relocated—comprising just 20 percent of Gaza's territory—entirely lack clean water, sanitation, medical care, and basic infrastructure. This reality stands in direct violation of international humanitarian law, which obligates Israel as the occupying power to ensure displaced civilians receive adequate shelter, hygiene, and protection.
"This annihilation campaign and the bloodshed must end. It is long past time for Western governments and other influential powers to move beyond statements and apply meaningful pressure on Israel to lift the siege and abandon any designs on annexing Gaza", added Khalidi.
"Peace cannot be brokered on the ruins of Gaza nor the theft of Palestinian land. Ahead of the Two-State Solution Summit planned in New York next month, world leaders must urge Israel to lift the siege and abandon any annexation plans of Gaza or the West Bank. What's at stake is not only Palestine's future, but the integrity of every nation that claims to uphold international law."