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In wartime Gaza, a complicating burden: Communication blackouts

Amid the chaos, destruction, and terror of war, communication blackouts have been an extra and complicating challenge for Palestinians in Gaza. Widespread phone and internet outages have cut Gaza residents off from the outside world and each other, led ambulances to get lost, and left anxious families wondering for days whether relatives were alive or dead.

Communication blackouts have dogged Gaza since Oct. 27, as fuel shortages hit telecom provider Paltel and Israel repeatedly struck cell towers and underground networks. According to Paltel, nine enclavewide blackouts of 24 hours or longer have occurred since the start of the war. But their frequency is increasing, including a two-day outage beginning Dec. 27.

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Communications are a basic societal need, especially in times of stress. In wartime Gaza, where phone and internet service has been besieged, better-equipped journalists say they have to balance their professional duties with helping people to cope.

Gaza journalists, by pooling their resources, remain able to use a satellite uplink to broadcast live feeds in front of Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah. Elsewhere in Gaza, video, photographs, and text reports must be uploaded by phone.

One day last week, Bassem Khalaf, a veteran journalist for the Al Araby TV network, had only hours to upload his latest report. With his deadline looming, he raced to a rooftop at the edge of the Al-Aqsa complex in hopes of a signal.

“We have returned to the stone ages, but with iPhones,” he says.

Signaling a new phase of its war against Hamas, Israel has ordered a drawdown of its troop deployment in the northern Gaza Strip. But there was little clarity over when the conflict might end for Gaza Palestinians increasingly left in the dark.

In a statement Monday, the Israeli army said it would begin a series of more targeted strikes against Hamas, and that the withdrawal of several brigades was meant “to gather strength for upcoming activities in the next year, as the fighting will persist.”

Yet even as it embarked on the demobilization, Israel maintained its intense bombing in central and southern Gaza Tuesday. Palestinian health officials said another 200 people were killed, pushing the death toll in Gaza past 22,000 since the war began Oct. 7 with a Hamas attack that killed more than 1,200 people in Israel.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Communications are a basic societal need, especially in times of stress. In wartime Gaza, where phone and internet service has been besieged, better-equipped journalists say they have to balance their professional duties with helping people to cope.

In Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, an estimated 60,000 residents of the nearby Bureij refugee camp filled the streets Tuesday amid bombing and artillery fire, days after fleeing their homes.

Many huddled around the Salah ad-Din traffic circle, anxiously searching for a taxi to take them to Rafah at the southern edge of the enclave, where they hoped for a better chance of finding shelter and food. Others erected makeshift tents or simply lay at the edge of the street.  

Amid the chaos, destruction, and terror of war, communication blackouts have been a complicating challenge, with Gaza Palestinians increasingly facing cuts to phone and internet service. Widespread outages have cut Gaza Palestinians off from the outside world and each other, led ambulances to get lost, created food aid mix-ups, and left anxious families wondering for days whether relatives were alive or dead.

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