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Some Palestinians in Gaza told the Center for peaceful communication of their desire to leave Hamas the ruling enclave. (Video: Center for Peaceful Communication.)
Since Egypt allegedly rejects President Donald Trump’s proposal, citing the need to protect Palestinian cause and its national security, while coordinating with Arab leaders on an alternative plan, voices from the Gaza war say they want.
Gazani, desperate to escape, told Fox News Digital to support President Donald Trump Moving Proposal – to turn Gaza into a “Middle East Riviera” after empties it more than 2 million Palestinians – although it remains unclear whether they will be allowed to return. Many Gazani say they want to leave – when only the boundaries open.
“I will live in tents for 10 years. Egypt was responsible for the renewal of gauze after the past wars – and you can still see some of the ruins of the 2008 Israeli military campaign. I would rather go and get 10 years of life than wait for a plan to be implemented While I live in a tent, “said Walid, a 29-year-old from Nuseiirat Camp in Northern Gazi, he told Fox News Digital via WhatsApp in an interview provided by the Peace Communication Center (CPC).
Gaza History in the middle of Trump’s plan for the renewal of the enclave

The Palestinians gather in the hope that they will receive help delivered to Gaza via the Sea dock, May 19, 2024. (Reuters/Ramadan Abed/File Photo)
Walid, like many others, said that before the war, the Gazans tried to leave – not because they wanted to leave their homeland, but because they did not see the future for Hamas to rule.
Egypt, who took the lead in the development of a three to four -year -old reconstruction plan, refuses to accept Palestinian Refugees, holding Rafah crossed closed, preventing mass movement from Gaza. Hamas, meanwhile, continues to perform military control while applying terror, although he could not provide basic management, making life unbearable to civilians.
The man who was standing in front of the ruins of his former home, interviewed and recorded by the CPC, explained his despair: “If I left today, I would be better. You want me to live in these ruins? – let alone a person. “
A woman in Gaza, her face is blurred, like many others who are afraid to speak against Hamas, she spoke of suffocating existence, saying CPC: “People feel like prisoners. There is no way to go out. It has created a state of frustration and despair. “

President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meet at the White House, February 4, 2025. (Reuters/Elizabeth France)
One man near the coast of Gaza, who stands against a sharp contrast between the sea and the destruction of behind him, said: “Three quarters of those who have returned from the displacement campsites went south because the houses remain. I will not stay here because I will not stay here because I will not stay here because I will not stay here I will not stay because I will not stay because I will not stay here because I will not stay because I will not remain there will be illness.
Another man, who also recorded CPC near the sea, said, “Forgive my language, but even dogs cannot live in the northern gauze. No water, electricity, there is no infrastructure at all.”
‘Level IT’: Trump says we will ‘take’ gauze comic book, renew it to stabilize the Middle East
Joseph Braude, founder of CPC, non -profit organization who supports peace -owned activists seeking freedom from their terrorist dominance of their societies, said: “Gazane Hamas are trapped in incompatible conditions. It is dissatisfied that everyone neglects desperate petitions of men, women and women who They want to voluntarily leave Gaza. Call of President Trump To open the border so that they can continue a better life without war and destruction. If Hamas had opened the border, the world would have seen a mass exodus comparable to the fall of the Berlin Wall. “
Without homes, no functional government and there is no guarantee that the war will no longer break out, some Gazani dare to express their support to Trump’s proposal, which would allow them to move to other countries, including Egypt and Jordan, at least for the decades’ renovation procedure estimated by American officials. This is despite the danger of talking against Hamas.

The displaced Palestinian men watch the Egyptian armored carrier of the Egyptian army ride near the border fence between Gaza and Egypt, February 16, 2024 in Rafah, in the southern Gaza belt. (Mohammed Abed/AFP via Getty Images)
Raji Sourani, a leading lawyer for the Gaza rights, criticized Trump’s attitude in an interview with Associated Press, “This is the first time in history that the US president publicly and sincerely speaks of the commission of one of the most serious crimes,” he said.
Walid rejected the claim that Trump’s plan amounts to “ethnic cleansing”, a phrase that is widely used in international media. “Even those who are against the plan know that Gaza will not be empty. “But people who are not involved in politics will not oppose an idea that could finally end this war for them.”
Despite the broad suffering, Hamas refuses to give up control. Mohamad, a displaced father in the city of Gaza, described a society without a law in which the Hamas fighters appear only when releasing hostages or suppressing disagreements. Like many others, Mohamad is waiting for any hallway to open so that he can escape.
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Impromised tents set up near a strongly established security fence with Egypt on March 8, 2024 in Rafah, Gaza. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“If the door open, half of Gaza will leave,” he told Fox News Digital. “The other half will stay, but not because they love Hamas. Some will stay because they still have a house, work or family members who can’t leave.”
While post -war plans for gauze are formed, Mohamad’s question remains, “If the Gazans want to leave, why don’t anyone allow them?”