logo
'The sea is ours': Gaza's last refuge sealed off under Israeli ban

'The sea is ours': Gaza's last refuge sealed off under Israeli ban

The National8 hours ago
For decades, the shores of the Mediterranean have been Gaza's lifeline, its source of food and income, but also a place of refuge and escape from the realities of Israeli occupation. But now, after 21 months of war, even that last refuge has been sealed off.
Israel has issued military orders banning Palestinians in the enclave from one of their last sources of joy – the sea. Gazans are forbidden by new directives from swimming in the waters, while fishermen are prohibited from setting out to sea.
"The forces will deal with any violation to these restrictions," Israeli military spokesman Avichay Adraee said in a post on X. 'We urge fishermen, swimmers and divers to refrain from entering the sea. Entering the sea along the strip puts you at risk."
'We live off the sea'
The decision not only ruins the already collapsing fishing industry but also cuts off one of the last remaining spaces where Gazans could breathe, bathe and briefly forget about the daily devastation that surrounds them.
'We live off the sea. If there's no fishing, we don't eat,' Munthir Ayash, 52, a fisherman from Gaza city, told The National. 'Me, my five sons and their families – 45 people in total – depend entirely on the sea. With it closed, we face starvation.'
Mr Ayash has been fishing since childhood. Like thousands of others, he has braved sniper fire, naval raids and aerial bombardment just to reach Gaza's nearshore waters, never more than 700 metres from land, due to Israeli-imposed limits.
'Even that short distance was dangerous," he said. "The army fires sound bombs, smoke grenades and bullets. But we kept going. It's our only way to survive.'
But now, even that risk is no longer possible. The Israeli army has officially declared Gaza's coastal waters off-limits. For Mr Ayash and many others, this is a telling blow.
Zakaria Bakr, head of the Palestinian Fishermen's Syndicate in Gaza, believes the move is not a security measure but a deliberate war strategy.
'Since the war began, the sea has been under siege like everything else in Gaza,' Mr Bakr said. 'We were only allowed to fish up to 700 metres, a useless range. And any attempt to go further was met with live fire. Many were killed or injured.'
Now, with a full closure in place, Mr Bakr said more than 6,000 people working in the fishing sector will lose their livelihoods. More than 210 have been killed since the war began in October 2023, including 60 fishermen. About 95 per cent of boats and fishing equipment have already been destroyed by Israeli naval and air attacks.'
Fish production is zero now, he said. "It used to be 3,500 tonnes a year. Nothing moves in the sea any more. This isn't just about fishing, it's about food security. Two million people in Gaza depended on fish to survive.'
Mr Bakr calls the ban part of a broader, systematic effort to starve Gaza. 'This is not about security. It's economic, social and psychological warfare, a weapon of slow, deliberate suffocation.'
The sea was not only for fishing, it was for living, Ibrahim Dawla, 26, a displaced Palestinian from Gaza's Al Zaytoun neighbourhood, now living in a tent near the shore, told The National. "I used to go every day. The sea was where I bathed, where I relaxed, where I ran from the horror of war. Now even that's gone.'
'Where we felt human again'
Mr Dawla, like many Gazans, depended on the sea for basic hygiene in the absence of clean water. It was also one of the few open spaces left where people could gather to talk, swim, or sit, shaded from the destruction.
'People here die a million times every hour, We needed the sea just to feel human again, even if only for a few minutes. And they knew that. That's why they shut it down,' he said of the Israelis.
Even before the official closure, Israeli gunboats regularly opened fire on beachgoers. Still, people came. 'We called it our last breathing space. We knew it was dangerous, but it was the only place we had left.'
Now, he says, the beach is empty. 'I haven't gone for two days. None of my friends have either. We're all afraid we'll be shot just for standing there.'
For Gaza's fishermen, the war has not only destroyed their boats, it has erased a culture, a livelihood passed from father to son for generations.
Mr Ayash recalls how even during past escalations, they could always fall back on the sea. 'We could always find a way to fish. It gave us hope. But this time, they want to take everything. They want to erase us.'
He pauses, eyes scanning the shoreline. 'But the sea is ours. The land is ours. No matter how hard they try, it will stay ours.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gaza: Families of Israeli captives contact Hamas over fate of ceasefire talks
Gaza: Families of Israeli captives contact Hamas over fate of ceasefire talks

Middle East Eye

time34 minutes ago

  • Middle East Eye

Gaza: Families of Israeli captives contact Hamas over fate of ceasefire talks

The families of Israeli captives being held in Gaza reached out to Hamas through a representative to ask about the fate of stalled ceasefire talks, Middle East Eye can reveal. Sources told MEE that the third party reached out to Hamas after the captives' families feared Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin was trying to torpedo a possible deal. A senior figure within Hamas told the representative it was "serious" about reaching an agreement to end the war and release the captives, but that it was facing "intransigent Israeli positions", sources told MEE. "Hamas is serious about reaching an agreement to end the war and establish arrangements that ensure calm and stability. It has demonstrated significant flexibility and positive responsibility during the negotiation rounds," the sources quoted Hamas as saying. "Israel has insisted on continuing the war, destroying the Gaza Strip, displacing its population, and imposing a state of hunger, suffering, and ongoing massacres that have not ceased for a single day." New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Hamas and Israel reached a brief three-stage ceasefire in January, but the deal collapsed in March after Israel took back several of its captives and resumed bombing Gaza, walking away from the deal before talks with Hamas on a permanent end to the war could start. Since then, the Trump administration has given Israel full backing to wage war on Gaza. According to sources, the Hamas official told the representative that the Palestinian movement had complied with "everything stipulated" in the first phase of the previous ceasefire, which was supposed to transition to phase two talks on ending the war. Before withdrawing from the ceasefire, Hamas said that Israel committed "hundreds of violations", including deploying troops beyond 'buffer zones", killing 132 civilians, preventing the inflow of reconstruction material, and remaining in the Philadelphia Corridor that separates Gaza from Egypt. Hamas reportedly told the representative that despite Israel unilaterally resuming the war, it responded to proposals by mediators to revive the ceasefire, 'but Israel rejected them and insisted on releasing half of the Israeli prisoners without offering any guarantees that the war would cease. In fact, it openly insisted on its continuation'. As it stands, there are believed to be around 20 living captives in Gaza and just over 30 dead Israelis. Since the 7 October 2023 attacks on southern Israel, the country's military has only rescued eight captives in raids that have seen hundreds of Palestinians killed. Talks remain deadlocked On Sunday, US President Donald Trump said talks on a Gaza ceasefire were going along well, repeating remarks he made last week during a visit to Washington by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In contrast, MEE reported on Saturday that Hamas negotiators were sceptical that a ceasefire agreement could be reached in the current round of talks in Doha, Qatar. Sources close to Palestinian negotiators said talks have remained deadlocked over at least two of four key issues. Exclusive: Gaza talks at risk after Israel refuses to withdraw from Rafah Read More » The first is the extent of the proposed Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip during a 60-day truce. The second is the method of aid distribution. The US has reportedly proposed postponing discussions on these two points, instead focusing on the names of Palestinian prisoners to be released by Israel in exchange for the remaining Israeli captives. According to the sources, Hamas told the representative for the captives' families that it asked to amend three points related to the distribution of aid, the deployment of Israeli soldiers in Gaza and guarantees on ending the war after an initial 60-day truce is over. 'However, Israel has taken a hardline stance, particularly in its redeployment maps, where it seeks to control approximately 36 percent of the Gaza Strip's area and keep approximately 600,000 residents displaced and unable to return to their homes," Hamas is reported to have said. "Israel has repeatedly rejected our offer to return all Israeli prisoners at once in exchange for ending the war. "They rejected it and preferred a partial solution. This is a clear indication of their intention to continue the war and their disregard for prisoners as a central issue for Israeli society," it added. For more than 21 months, Israel has relentlessly bombed the besieged Gaza Strip, displacing the entire 2.3 million population multiple times, and has killed more than 58,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians. The figure also includes at least 1,400 health sector professionals, 280 United Nations aid workers - the highest staff death toll in UN history - and at least 228 journalists, with the highest number of media workers killed in conflict since the Committee to Protect Journalists began recording data in 1992.

Is the New Superman Movie Criticizing Israel?
Is the New Superman Movie Criticizing Israel?

UAE Moments

time3 hours ago

  • UAE Moments

Is the New Superman Movie Criticizing Israel?

James Gunn's 2025 Superman film has fueled controversy over whether its fictional conflict is a pointed commentary on the Israel–Palestine war. The movie opens with Superman stopping Boravia, an ally backed by the U.S., from invading its neighboring nation, Jarhanpur. Boravia's technologically advanced military attacks unarmed civilians across a fortified border, while Jarhanpuris—often portrayed as non-white and vulnerable- suffer intense casualties. Audience Interpretations Audiences quickly drew parallels: on social media, posts claiming the film is 'very anti‑Israel' gained millions of views, arguing that the Boravia–Jarhanpur storyline serves as an allegory for Israel's actions in Gaza. One user wrote on X: 'Y'all were not kidding about how anti‑Israel and pro‑Palestine that Superman movie was… they were not slick with it AT ALL'. Others on Reddit echoed similar sentiments about the film's depiction of imperialist aggression and the imbalance of power. Director's Perspective Despite the interpretations, Gunn and his team have never officially linked the film to the Israel–Palestine conflict. Gunn described Superman as 'about politics' and 'morality,' highlighting its immigrant narrative and broader themes of social justice and due process. In interviews, he said the film encourages empathy and human kindness, values he feels are eroding in today's polarized world. Criticism and Defense Some conservative critics dismissed symbolic readings of the film as overblown. Commentator Ben Shapiro argued that supposed political messaging is 'really weak' and that viewers may be projecting political interpretations into a blockbuster meant primarily as entertainment. Others praised the film's willingness to explore moral complexity and global themes through superhero storytelling. Superman does not explicitly name any real-world countries or conflicts. Yet the Boravia–Jarhanpur scenario—with Western-backed military aggression against a disenfranchised, largely non-white population—has led many to perceive thinly veiled parallels to the Israel–Palestine conflict. While Gunn has not confirmed intentional allegory, the film invites interpretations that resonate with ongoing geopolitical tensions and broader questions of power, identity, and empathy.

Israel Bans Palestinians in Gaza from Swimming and Fishing
Israel Bans Palestinians in Gaza from Swimming and Fishing

UAE Moments

time3 hours ago

  • UAE Moments

Israel Bans Palestinians in Gaza from Swimming and Fishing

The Israeli military issued formal orders on Monday, July 14, declaring Palestinian entry into Gaza's coastal waters strictly prohibited. The ban covers swimming, fishing, and diving, and warns that any violations will be met with force by Israeli forces. During Israel's genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, more than 6,000 people, the majority of them fishermen, have effectively lost their jobs and sources of food. The fishing sector, once producing around 3,500 tonnes a year, has dropped to zero. Nearly all boats and equipment have been destroyed, and over 210 people from this sector have been killed since October 2023, including at least 60 fishermen. Gaza's fishing port has been destroyed, and all maritime activity has been stopped because of the genocide. Gaza's Government Media Office, led by director general Ismail Al‑Thawabta, condemned the ban as a violation of international law. He described it as a deliberate starvation tactic targeting Gaza's livelihood, undermining the right to work and live with dignity, and amounting to collective punishment under the Fourth Geneva Convention and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. As the enclave endures shortages of food, clean water, fuel, and electricity under a broader blockade, the maritime ban marks yet another devastating blow. With no safe space left on land or at sea, more than two million Palestinians in Gaza are stripped of one of the few existing freedoms and sources of survival. This article was previously published on kuwaitmoments. To see the original article, click here

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store