Israel has struck at least three locations in Gaza to which it had ordered civilians to evacuate since the breakdown of a fragile truce between Israel and Hamas earlier this month, CNN analysis has found.
On December 1, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) released a map of Gaza – divided into 623 numbered blocks?– indicating areas the military would imminently strike, and areas to which civilians should flee. It was made accessible online via a QR code printed on leaflets dropped over the strip.
The map, a vestige of the short-lived plan from the 1970s to rebuild Gaza in the early years of Israel’s occupation of the coastal strip, was described by the IDF as “a safe way to preserve your security, your lives, and the lives of your families.”
Residents of Gaza are told to “please pay attention and check this map,” while following “instructions of the IDF through various media outlets.”
However, CNN analysis shows that IDF instructions have – at times – been imprecise and confusing. Regular IDF updates highlight numbered blocks in orange, urging citizens to evacuate these locations, and move to other areas labeled on the map. But some of the messaging has been contradictory and concerns have also been raised over Palestinians’ capacity to access the information due to power and telecommunication outages.
Using videos and images shared online, satellite imagery and local news reports, CNN has verified three Israeli strikes on areas where citizens were told to flee.
“Since the beginning of the fighting, the IDF has been imploring the civilian population to temporarily evacuate from areas of intense fighting, to safer areas, in order to minimize the risk posed by remaining in areas of intense hostilities,” the IDF said in a statement in response to CNN’s reporting.
The IDF also claimed that they struck the areas identified in this report after “intelligence indication that these places were safehouses for commanders of the Rafah Brigade of the Hamas terror organization.”
“The IDF continues to operate against Hamas infrastructure and terrorists wherever they are located in the Gaza Strip,” the statement continued.
Strikes in areas civilians directed to
On December 2, the IDF’s spokesperson for Arab media, Avichay Adraee posted evacuation orders on social media for citizens in parts of the Gaza Strip, which the IDF had dubbed a “safe zone” in the first month and a half of the war, prior to the truce.
Multiple images of the same location were shared – each with different locations highlighted. On the map, areas to the north and east of the city of Khan Younis are highlighted orange, and arrows instruct residents to evacuate from these areas to Al-Mawasi – a 5.22 square mile coastal strip designated a safe zone by the IDF – or to Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city.
Aid organizations have raised concerns regarding the Al-Mawasi “humanitarian?zone,” with the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Director-General calling it “a recipe for disaster” due to cramped conditions and lack of infrastructure or services.
Meanwhile, analysis shows, strikes continued to hit Rafah.
In the three days after Adraee’s post, three Israeli strikes targeted locations in Rafah, CNN has found, despite IDF advice stating Gazans should evacuate “to Rafah.”
On the afternoon of December 3, a strike took place in Rafah’s El-Geneina neighborhood. Footage, filmed moments after the attack, shows a large smoke plume rising from a location close to Saddam Street in Rafah.
Photographs and videos shared on social media, and geolocated to a position matching the plume, show a large crater and multiple buildings that have been damaged or destroyed.
Local media reported at least 17 people were killed and dozens injured in the attack, which struck the home of the al-Bawab family.
Later that night, another airstrike hit the home of the Al-Jazzar family in the Al-Tanour neighborhood of Rafah. Footage captured in the aftermath of the attack shows individuals desperately searching for survivors in the wreckage. One video shows a man, his legs trapped under rubble, being rescued by Civil Defense teams.
CNN geolocated the footage to a house in Rafah’s Al-Tanour neighborhood and confirmed the strike using satellite imagery.
Journalists in the area told CNN that 18 people were killed in the bombing – among them were journalist Shaima Al-Jazzar and her family. CNN has not been able to independently verify the casualties.
CNN was also able to verify reports from the following evening, December 4, that an Israeli strike targeted a public water tower less than 400 meters from the Al-Jazzar family home. Through analysis of satellite imagery, it is possible to confirm the water tower was destroyed between December 3 and 9.
There were also reports of at least three other airstrikes on locations in Rafah on December?2, 3 and 5 but CNN was not able to independently verify these attacks.
Confusing messaging about safe zones
The IDF also issued contradictory messages in the north of Gaza which could have led people wrongly to believe they were in safe areas, CNN analysis shows.
On December 2, Adraee posted evacuation orders on social media for citizens in the northern Gaza Strip, highlighting a number of blocks to the north of Gaza City, including large parts of Jabalia Refugee Camp. The graphic instructed people?in these areas to “evacuate your homes immediately through the Haifa and Khalil al-Wazir axes and go to the known shelter centers and schools in the Al-Daraj and Tuffah neighborhoods and west of Gaza City.”
Adraee attached two inconsistent images to the instructions. Both showed the same area, but the second image had a larger number of blocks deemed unsafe.
This created confusing messaging where certain “blocks” were simultaneously presented as “safe” and “unsafe.” For example, block 720 is not highlighted in the first image, but appears in the orange area in the second image. Block 717, which is partly highlighted in the first image, appears squarely in the orange zone in the second image.
Adraee published updated advice on December 3 in which only the image showing the wider shaded area was included.
CNN has verified two Israeli strikes which occurred inside blocks which were not highlighted in the first version of the image – so according to its guidance should have been safe – after Adraee shared the contradictory evacuation orders.
On the evening of December 3, a video appeared online which appeared to show a petrol station engulfed in flames. It was released alongside reports that a petrol station in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City had been hit by an Israeli airstrike.
The video is shot at night, making it hard to detect any significant landmarks. However, reports also claimed that the petrol station was located next to offices of the Palestinian Civil Defense. With this information, CNN was able to locate a Civil Defense office and a petrol station side-by-side in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood.
Satellite imagery of the area – provided by Planet Labs on December 4 – reveals destruction and clear signs of fire at the location of the petrol station, located in block 720, an area that was not highlighted in one of the posted maps. The Palestinian Civil Defense later released a statement saying that three members of its?civilian team had been killed, and a number of others injured by the bombing.
On the same day, local reports claimed that the Al-Salam Mosque in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood had been targeted by Israeli strikes.
Satellite imagery of the area does not reveal clear damage to the mosque, but there are signs of bombing in the surrounding area.
Although it has not been possible to confirm the exact date of this attack - which hit block 717 - satellite imagery analysis reveals the strike took place between December 2 and 9, in the days following Adraee’s post correcting initial map.
The IDF says that the maps are reflective of a commitment to ensuring “all possible precautions to avoid causing loss of civilian life or injury, adopting all available means.”
But rights groups and international organizations have cast doubt on those claims. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has raised concerns over? the accessibility of the map for residents of Gaza, given power outages and telecommunications cuts.
Data from the global internet monitor, NetBlocks, reveals that at times when the IDF was providing evacuation orders for numbered blocks around Gaza, network connectivity in the Rafah governorate was less than a fifth of peak levels. In the Khan Younis governorate, there were times when connectivity was recorded as zero.
“It is unclear how those residing in Gaza would access the map without electricity and amid recurrent telecommunications cuts,” an OCHA briefing said.