Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel insisted on Saturday that Israel would not bow to international pressure to call off its plan for a ground invasion of Rafah, the southernmost city in Gaza that is now packed with more than a million Palestinians.
Many of the people now in Rafah are displaced and living in schools, tents or the homes of friends and relatives, part of a desperate search for any safe refuge from IsraelтАЩs military campaign, which has dragged on for more than four months. Their lives are a daily struggle to find enough food and water to survive.
тАЬThose who want to prevent us from operating in Rafah are basically telling us: Lose the war,тАЭ Mr. Netanyahu said at a news conference in Jerusalem on Saturday evening. тАЬItтАЩs true that thereтАЩs a lot of opposition abroad, but this is exactly the moment that we need to say that we wonтАЩt be doing a half or a third of the job.тАЭ
About the same time as Mr. Netanyahu addressed the news conference, thousands of anti-government protesters filled a central thoroughfare in Tel Aviv тАФ the largest protest against the prime minister in months. They filled the same street where mass protests against Mr. NetanyahuтАЩs efforts to weaken the countryтАЩs judiciary riled the nation before the start of the Israel-Hamas war.
Calls for an immediate election rose above a din of air horns. Protesters lit a red flare in the middle of a drum circle while others wielding flags stared down half a dozen police officers on horseback.
тАЬThe people need to rise up, and the government needs to go,тАЭ said one protester, Yuval Lerner, 57. Mr. Lerner said that even before the war, he lost confidence that the government has the nationтАЩs best interest at heart, but тАЬOct. 7 proved it,тАЭ he said.
Mr. NetanyahuтАЩs comments also came as world leaders and international organizations were raising alarms that an invasion of Rafah would only compound the humanitarian disaster for displaced Palestinians.
Josep Borrell, the European UnionтАЩs top diplomat, reiterated on Saturday his appeal to Israel to refrain from launching a military operation in Rafah тАЬthat would worsen an already catastrophic humanitarian situation.тАЭ
Mr. Netanyahu, however, said Palestinians would be permitted to leave Rafah and contended that there was тАЬa lot of spaceтАЭ north of the city where civilians could resettle.
The Israeli leader played down the chances of a quick breakthrough in indirect talks with Hamas on a cease-fire in exchange for a hostage release. He said that Hamas тАФ the armed group that long controlled Gaza and which led the Oct. 7 attack on Israel that started the war тАФ was making тАЬludicrousтАЭ demands in those negotiations.
Explaining his decision to stop Israeli officials from participating in follow-up negotiations in Cairo earlier this week, the prime minister went on to say Hamas had not compromised on its demands тАЬone nanometer.тАЭ
тАЬThereтАЩs nothing to do until we see a change,тАЭ he added.
Earlier on Saturday, Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of HamasтАЩs political wing, issued a statement accusing Israel of тАЬprocrastinatingтАЭ in addressing HamasтАЩs demands. Hamas has been calling for a comprehensive cease-fire, the reconstruction of Gaza, the end of IsraelтАЩs blockade of the territory and the release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
President Biden told a news conference on Friday that he didnтАЩt expect Israel to invade Rafah while efforts to free the hostages were ongoing.
South Africa this week asked the International Court of Justice, the United NationsтАЩ top judicial body, to intervene to stop IsraelтАЩs planned advance into Rafah. But on Friday, the court declined to issue new constraints aimed at preventing such an incursion.
Instead, it said the тАЬperilous situationтАЭ in Gaza, including in Rafah, required Israel to abide by its previous ruling last month, which included taking тАЬall measures within its powerтАЭ to prevent the crime of genocide by its forces.
Mr. Netanyahu has called the charge that Israel has engaged in genocide тАЬfalseтАЭ and тАЬoutrageous.тАЭ
Israeli officials have insisted that an incursion into Rafah is needed to destroy tunnels between Egypt and Gaza and to try to root out Palestinian militants there. But the Israelis have not yet presented a plan to evacuate civilians as the U.S., IsraelтАЩs closest ally, has demanded.
Many civilians sheltering in Rafah have already moved multiple times as IsraelтАЩs military campaign has pushed farther south, and some have said their homes north of the city have been destroyed and they have grown tired of repeatedly relocating.
тАЬIf they want to come here тАФ amid all these people тАФ there will be massacres,тАЭ said Khalil el-Halabi, 70, one of the many displaced Palestinians from northern Gaza who have sought shelter in Rafah.
Some displaced Palestinians have now moved back north toward Deir al Balah in central Gaza, according to the U.N.тАЩs humanitarian coordinator.
People in Rafah have grown so desperate for food that they are stopping aid trucks and eating what they manage to get on the spot, according to the United Nations.
Ahmad al-Ghazaly, 26, another displaced Palestinian in Rafah, said he was sheltering in a tent with his parents, both of whom he said had chronic illnesses. He said that he hoped to get permits for both of them to leave for Egypt via the Rafah border crossing, but that the process had become even more difficult and costly in recent weeks.
тАЬItтАЩs been four months in which weтАЩve barely slept, eaten, showered, and thereтАЩs constant bombardment,тАЭ Mr. al-Ghazaly said. тАЬWeтАЩre living in conditions, IтАЩm sorry to say, that are barely better than those of animals.тАЭ
As the Israeli invasion of Rafah looms, neighboring Egypt has grown increasingly concerned that an Israeli operation in the city could send Palestinian refugees streaming into its territory. Egypt has warned Israel of тАЬdire consequencesтАЭ should Israeli forces embark on a ground operation in Rafah.
But IsraelтАЩs defense minister, Yoav Gallant, tried to assuage those concerns on Friday, saying Israel had тАЬno intention of evacuating Palestinian civilians to Egypt.тАЭ
Israel and Egypt have had a decades-long peace treaty that is a cornerstone of stability in the Middle East.
In recent weeks, Egypt has reinforced the border with Gaza in what some analysts have seen as a response to fears of an influx of Palestinians pouring in. A contractor and an engineer told The New York Times recently that they had received a government commission to build a concrete wall five meters high (about 16 feet) to close off a five-kilometer-square plot of land on the Egyptian side of the Gaza border in Rafah.
Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry of Egypt said his country strongly opposed any attempt to expel Palestinians to Egyptian territory and did not intend to provide тАЬsafe areasтАЭ for Palestinian refugees. But if such a situation arose, he added, the Egyptian authorities would act with тАЬthe humanity that is necessaryтАЭ and provide тАЬsupport to innocent civilians.тАЭ
Adam Sella contributed reporting from Tel Aviv.