Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Arabs return to northern Gaza as IDF pulls out of Netzarim Corridor

Palestinians were allowed to pass through the corridor by foot without undergoing security checks.

Gazans walk north on the al-Rashid Road coastal route to cross the Netzarim Corridor on Jan. 27, 2025. Photo by Youssef Alzanoun/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images.
Gazans walk north on the al-Rashid Road coastal route to cross the Netzarim Corridor on Jan. 27, 2025. Photo by Youssef Alzanoun/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images.

At 7 a.m. on Monday, Israel allowed Palestinians to begin passing into the northern part of the Gaza Strip after the Israel Defense Forces left the Netzarim Corridor dividing the Strip.

In accordance with the terms of the ceasefire deal, Gazans were allowed to pass through the corridor by foot without undergoing security checks.

Vehicles were also allowed to return northward starting at 9 a.m., subject to inspection by an international consortium of security companies.

Hamas hailed the return of Palestinians to northern Gaza as “a victory for our people and a declaration of the failure and defeat of the occupation [i.e. Israel] and its displacement plans.”

Israel’s Channel 12 News aired pictures that purportedly showed armed Hamas gunmen moving alongside the noncombatant population, in an apparent breach of the ceasefire terms.

Palestinians in Gaza
Palestinians return to the northern Gaza Strip, as seen in Gaza City on Jan. 27, 2025. Photo by Khalil Kahlout/Flash90.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu briefly held up the return of Gazans to the northern Strip, with his office saying on Saturday that a breach of the ceasefire-for-hostages agreement occurred when Hamas failed to free a female civilian captive, Arbel Yehud.

Under the terms of the deal, Hamas was to have freed female civilians before female soldiers. Instead, the Palestinian terrorist group released four female soldiers on Saturday: Karina Ariev, 20; Daniella Gilboa, 20; Naama Levy, 20; and Liri Albag, 19.

Yehud, who was taken hostage, together with her boyfriend from Kibbutz Nir Oz, on Oct. 7, 2023, is reportedly being held by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist group. PIJ has falsely classified Yehud as an IDF soldier, according to reports.

A compromise was reached on Sunday night. Hamas agreed to free Yehud later this week, along with IDF soldier Agam Berger and an unidentified male captive.

“They want to make a deal, but I don’t. I’m not satisfied with it, so we’ll see what happens,” the president told reporters.
Since Oct. 7, 2023, the Toronto Police Service has made “over 517 arrests and laid over 1,275 charges in connection with demonstrations, protests and hate‑motivated offenses,” its police chief said.
“What made it easy for the D.C. government to do this is that they already had an existing standing program,” Ron Halber, CEO of the JCRC of Greater Washington, told JNS.
“We won’t support a Democrat who doesn’t represent the views and values of the vast majority of American Jews,” the Jewish Democratic Council of America said.
“For years, the Biden-Harris administration doggedly harassed and targeted Christians simply for living according to their beliefs,” Rep. Tim Walberg said.
Calls are mounting for the University of Portsmouth to act after a history professor posted on social media that “blowback is bad, but it is also inevitable.”