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<div class="gmail-archive-name"><a href="https://english.palinfo.com/category/reports/">Reports</a> </div>
<h1 class="gmail-single_title">Houses on the brink of collapse: Gaza\u2019s winter turns resilience into a gamble</h1>
<p class="gmail-single_date">Sunday 28-December-2025</p>
<div class="gmail-featured_image"><img width="408" height="240" src="https://english.palinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/gaza-10.jpg" class="gmail-attachment-name_thumbnail gmail-size-name_thumbnail gmail-wp-post-image" alt="" title="Houses on the brink of collapse: Gaza\u2019s winter turns resilience into a gamble" style="margin-right: 0px;"> </div><div class="gmail-post_content">
<p>GAZA, (PIC)</p>
<p>In Gaza, danger does not stop at the limits of bombardment, nor does
it end when aircraft retreat from the sky. After more than a year of a
devastating war that reshaped geography and life, thousands of families
are now fighting a new battle inside what remains of their homes, amid
cracked walls and ceilings suspended over deep fissures, awaiting
collapse at any moment.</p>
<p>In neighborhoods whose features have been altered under the rubble,
houses are no longer safe havens but fragile structures, some missing
half their mass, others standing like exhausted bodies leaning on broken
pillars. Despite residents\u2019 awareness of the scale of danger, these
homes remain inhabited because alternatives are nearly nonexistent, and
leaving means total homelessness.</p>
<p>Children here do not sleep in peace; they sleep staring at the cracks
in the ceiling, as if guarding it from falling. Mothers fear the sound
of the wind more than the night itself, and fathers do not just follow
the news bulletins, they watch the walls, touch them, read their
silence, and try to estimate how much time remains. Explosions have
stopped in some areas, but fear has not; it has moved from the sky into
the homes.</p>
<p class="gmail-has-vivid-red-color gmail-has-text-color gmail-has-link-color gmail-wp-elements-e9a616d0deecfb8f8eb782c2190a47b3">Where do we go? A question without an answer</p>
<p>Beneath a residential building that previously suffered a direct
strike west of Khan Yunis, the Al-Haddad family, 14 members, live inside
a dilapidated apartment unfit for human habitation. The building lost
its upper floors, and what remains is classified by engineers as
\u201cunsafe,\u201d yet the family has nowhere else to go.</p>
<p>Akram Al-Haddad says they were forced to return to the apartment
after their homes were completely destroyed during the bombardment, \u201cWe
know we are risking our lives, but where do we go? There are no
alternative homes, no ability to rent a safe place, and all appeals have
received no response.\u201d</p>
<p>Stones fall from time to time, cold seeps in from every corner, and
rainwater easily finds its way inside. With every report of a similar
house collapsing in another neighborhood, children\u2019s fear doubles and
the burden of waiting grows heavier.</p>
<p>These stories repeat with every weather system that reaches Gaza
carrying what it can of rain and storms, pushing hundreds of displaced
families living in tents to seek shelter in their collapse-prone homes
after failing to remain in tents flooded by water or uprooted by winds.</p>
<p>Human rights reports have documented that dozens of buildings across
various areas of the Gaza Strip were previously damaged by Israeli
bombardment and are on the verge of collapse. Yet families remain in
them \u201cdespite knowing the extent of their structural weakness,\u201d seeing
these cracked buildings as a less dangerous option than staying in a
tent that offers no protection from cold or rain.</p>
<p class="gmail-has-vivid-red-color gmail-has-text-color gmail-has-link-color gmail-wp-elements-4b95d5054a3aed2372e07b6c1ed8ac85">Half a house, half a life</p>
<p>The scene of the Al-Haddad family is not much different from the
reality of the Salameh family, whose home was destroyed in two stages,
leaving only part of the ground floor intact. In this narrow space lives
Rowaida Salameh, an 80-year-old woman with limited mobility, with her
daughter Khuloud. Rubble blocks the entrances, and destroyed rooms
surround what remains of the house, as if the place reminds them every
moment of what happened.</p>
<p>Khuloud says she fully understands the danger of staying and that
engineers warned them of the possibility of collapse, but she has no
alternative, \u201cNo mobile homes, no shelters, no source of income. Leaving
means homelessness, staying means danger.\u201d</p>
<p>Among these families is Sumaya Nabhan from the Al-Rimal neighborhood,
who said she lives with her family inside a dangerously leaning
building, \u201clike entering a slide in an amusement park\u201d after their
original home was destroyed. She adds that she feels at every moment
that the walls could collapse over their heads.</p>
<p>That feeling turned into a tragic incident when, in the same
neighborhood where Nabhan lives, a wall of a house sheltering displaced
people collapsed due to strong winds and heavy rain, killing a
Palestinian woman (30 years old) after the wall fell onto her tent
adjacent to the remains of the destroyed building. Other tents in
different areas of the Strip were flooded or swept away by the harsh
weather.</p>
<p>Before seeking refuge in cracked buildings, thousands of displaced
people lived in temporary, worn-out tents that, since last November,
have repeatedly been flooded or been blown away by strong winds and
heavy rain, forcing families out into the open amid cold weather.</p>
<p>Civil defense authorities have repeatedly warned against taking
shelter in collapse-prone homes, stressing that thousands of housing
units in the Strip have suffered serious partial damage rendering them
unfit for habitation. But these warnings collide with a harsh reality:
no alternative places, no building materials, and no ability to
establish safe temporary housing.</p>
<p class="gmail-has-vivid-red-color gmail-has-text-color gmail-has-link-color gmail-wp-elements-0f252ac19b25575baf80ed7f0d6b65d7">Numbers reveal the tragedy</p>
<p>The Government Media Office (GMO) in Gaza confirms that the tents
spread across displacement camps functioned as temporary shelters that
are fundamentally unfit for living, made of worn fabrics that do not
protect from rain or cold and lacking sanitation facilities and
electricity.</p>
<p>Ismail Al-Thawabteh, GMO Director General, estimates that around 1.5
million people (approximately 288,000 families) have had their homes
destroyed by Israel.</p>
<p>Al-Thawabteh stated that the number of people living in official or
informal shelter camps is estimated at about 1,371,000, noting that
roughly 620,000 people (120,000 families) live in homes on the verge of
collapse, exposing them to the risks of death and injury, especially
during winter due to rain and wind.</p>
<p>He estimates that about 48,000 people (9,000 families) live inside
governmental and official buildings, and notes that the number of tents
that entered the Gaza Strip since the start of the war 26 months ago
reached about 135,000 tents. However, 125,000 of them (93% of the total)
have deteriorated and gone out of service.</p>
<p>The official estimates that around 22,000 tents were damaged by rain
and winds accompanying recent weather systems over the short past
period.</p>
<p class="gmail-has-vivid-red-color gmail-has-text-color gmail-has-link-color gmail-wp-elements-024c4c79bd160292442c5c905ffa7c42">The humanitarian protocol, awaiting the worst</p>
<p>He explains that the tents that entered over the past two months,
following the implementation of the latest ceasefire agreement, reached
nearly 20,000 tents, stressing that they are \u201cabsolutely insufficient,
as Gaza urgently needs 300,000 tents, and what has entered represents
only 7% of the immediate actual need.\u201d</p>
<p>He continues, \u201cWhen tents deteriorate and go out of service,
displaced people try to repair them, but they remain entirely unsuitable
for winter; therefore, what is needed now is 280,000 tents.\u201d</p>
<p>Al-Thawabteh affirms that Israel refuses to allow the entry of
prefabricated mobile homes, despite this being a violation of the
humanitarian protocol annexed to the ceasefire agreement.</p>
<p>He adds that these prefabricated units would solve a large part of
the housing and shelter problem for tens of thousands of families
suffering displacement, which Israel insists on rejecting. Such mobile
homes would also provide displaced people with a \u201cdignified\u201d living
environment, as an alternative to tents unfit for human habitation.</p>
<p>Despite repeated collapse incidents and the victims left beneath the
rubble, thousands of families in Gaza continue to live the same harsh
equation: a cracked roof is better than sleeping under a tent that
blocks no wind and offers no protection from wetness at all. Families
ask for nothing more than a basic right, a safe roof, in a merciless
reality where resilience turns into a gamble, and life into a constant
wait for something worse.</p>
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