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May 31, 2026
Satellite Images Expose Erasure of Southern Gaza as Israeli Control Expands
High‑resolution satellite photos added to Google Earth show the Sheikh Mohammed cemetery in Khan Yo…
High‑resolution satellite imagery released on 25 February 2026 reveals that the Sheikh Mohammed cemetery in Khan Younis has been erased and turned into an Israeli military outpost, while entire neighbourhoods across southern Gaza have been reduced to rubble. The visual evidence, highlighted by Al Jazeera, illustrates a broader pattern of territorial expansion and cultural erasure.
Satellite proof of Gaza’s reshaped landscape
The updated Google‑Earth layers show the former cemetery, residential blocks in Rafah, the Swedish‑built coastal village, and the Hamad City housing project all replaced by fortified positions, tents and debris. The images capture the disappearance of streets, the flattening of the 752‑unit Tal as‑Sultan housing project, and the conversion of the Rafah border crossing into a heavily fortified military zone.
Human‑cost statistics from the ground and from monitors
73,000 Palestinians killed since the conflict escalated.
94 % of Gaza’s cemeteries fully or partially destroyed (Euro‑Med Human Rights Monitor).
97 % of schools damaged or destroyed, leaving 658,000 children without formal education.
1.9 million of 2.3 million residents internally displaced.
60 % of the population has lost their homes completely.
Only 5 % of Gaza’s agricultural land remains usable (FAO).
Israeli forces now control roughly 70 % of the Strip, up from 60 % earlier this year (leaked video of Benjamin Netanyahu).
Implications for the humanitarian and geopolitical landscape
The systematic demolition of cemeteries, schools and farms not only erases physical landmarks but also attacks collective memory and food security. With agricultural output slashed to under five percent, experts warn Gaza is on the brink of famine. The loss of educational infrastructure threatens a generation of Palestinians, while the expanding occupation deepens violations of the October cease‑fire and raises the risk of a protracted, “permanent” status quo, as warned by UN envoy Nickolay Mladenov.
What lies ahead: risks and possible international responses
If the current trajectory continues, Gaza could face a full‑scale famine within months, prompting urgent calls for a new cease‑fire and humanitarian corridors. International pressure may increase as documentation of cultural erasure and mass displacement fuels advocacy campaigns. However, without a clear shift in Israeli policy or renewed diplomatic engagement, the occupation could solidify, making reconstruction and return of displaced families increasingly unlikely.
#Muhannad Qishta
#Benjamin Netanyahu
#Gaza Strip
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