For Ghazan, a 60-day ceasefire is being negotiated between Israel and Hamas.
A window to bring large amounts of strict essential food, water and medicine after severe – and many times – Israeli restrictions on help delivery.
But Israel’s Defense Minister Israel will create a two -month stop in military operations for Israel Katj, which he has called a “human city” in the ruins of the southern city of Rafah, which includes almost every ghazan except people belonging to armed groups.
As per the plan, Palestinians will be allowed and not allowed to be allowed and not allowed.
At the domestic and international level, both critics have condemned the proposal with human rights groups, academics and lawyers, it is called a blueprint for the “concentration camp”.
It is not clear to what extent it represents the concrete plan of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government or is it a conversation strategy to put more pressure on Hamas in talks on a ceasefire and hostage release deal.
After the end of the war, in the remarkable absence of any Israeli scheme for Gaza, the idea is filling strategic vacuum.
Katz informed a group of Israeli correspondents that the new camp will initially be around 600,000 Palestinians – and eventually at home with a full 2.1 million population.
His plan will be seen to achieve the site from a distance, while international bodies managed the area. He said that four assistance distribution sites will be set up in the area.
Katz also restored his desire to encourage Palestinians to “live voluntarily” from Gaza to other countries.
But it has not obtained traction or support among other senior figures in Israel, and according to reports the proposal has also triggered a conflict between the Prime Minister and the head of the IDF.
The Israeli media says that the head of the general staff, Lt Gen Ile Zameer clarified that the army was not obliged to forcibly move the citizens, as the plan would be required.
It has been claimed that General Zameer and Netanyahu were involved in an angry exchange during a recent war cabinet meeting.
Taal Schnider, a political correspondent at the Centrist Times of Israel, said the conscience would be in a strong position to push back as the government “practically begged to take a job from him” six months ago – and Netanyahu strongly supported his appointment.
This is not only the top military brass which is contrary to the idea. There is also a hurdle between the rank and the file.
“Any transfer of civil population is a form of war crime at his home in Tel Aviv, the IDF reservoir, the IDF reservoir, it is a form of ethnic cleaning, which is also a form of genocide.”
A 28 -year -old former officer in the armored Corps is refusing to serve any time in the army after a 270 -day active match in Gaza.
He describes himself as a patriot and argues that Israel should defend himself but there is no strategy of the current war nor ends in sight.
Wilk is also part of soldiers for hostages, a group, which is calling for the end of the war so that the release of 50 Israelis can still be taken captive by Hamas in Gaza, of which up to 20 are believed to be up to 20.
Meanwhile, 16 Israeli experts issued a joint letter on Friday in international law, condemning the scheme, which he said that war would form a crime. In the letter, “all relevant sides publicly urged to withdraw from the plan, abandon it and avoid it.”
The plan has disappointed the Palestinians in Gaza.
“We completely reject this proposal, and we reject any Palestinian displacement from their land,” Sabraine, who was forced to leave Khan Younis, told the BBC. “We are firm and will stay here till our last breath.”
Ahmed Al Mughayar from Rafah said: “Freedom is above everything. This is our land, we should be free to move wherever we want. Why are we being pressurized like this?”
It is unclear how much support for Katj’s plan is among the general public, but recent surveys have indicated most of the Jews in Israel in favor of the expulsion of the Palestinians to the Palestinians.
A survey published in the leftist daily newspaper Hretz claimed that 82 percent of Jewish Israelis supported such a step.
But there has been a keen decrease of public support for the proposal between the distant ministers, including the chief ministers in the alliance Itmar Ben-Gwir and Bezelle Smotrich.
Both the Palestinians have been an outspoken supporters of the Gaza and the Jews settled.
Taal Schnider said that the two ministers may still support the proposal for a month camp.
“Maybe they are waiting to see if the wind is to see if it is serious. Both Smotrich and Ben-Gwir are both cabinet members and have more access to internal discussions. Perhaps they think it is just to put political pressure on Hamas.”
Outside Israel, the proposal of a new camp for all ghazans has attracted extensive criticism.
In the UK, the minister of the Middle East Hamish Falkner posted on social media that he was “wasted” by the plan.
“The Palestinian region should not be reduced,” he wrote. “Citizens must be able to return to their communities. We need to move towards a ceasefire deal and open a route for permanent peace.”
British human rights lawyer Baronna Kennedy Casey told the BBC that the project would force Palestinians in a “concentration camp”.
Details, which have been used by other critics, including academics, NGOs and senior officials of the United Nations, are quite echoing the role of concentration camps in Holocaust.
Baronic Kennedy said that the plan – as well as Israel’s latest works – have inspired him to conclude that Israel is a massacre in Gaza.
“I was very reluctant to go there, because the threshold should be too much. Must have a specific intention to the massacre. But now what we are seeing is a genocide behavior,” he said.
Israel has rejected the allegation of genocide and states that it does not target citizens.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry also told the BBC that “the belief that the Israeli concentration camp is deeply aggressive and draws similarities with the Nazis”. Israel “follows the Geneva Convention”, the couple, which mentions international rules, controls the treatment of citizens in the occupied areas.
In addition to the serious warnings about what can happen, the possibility of a new camp is impacting the efforts to end the Gaza war.
In a ceasefire talks, the Palestinian sources said that the BBC said that the plan has worried the Hamas delegation and created a new obstacle for a deal.
Additional reporting by Joyce Liu and John Landy