Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

IDF withdraws from Netzarim Corridor, bolsters Gaza border

The redeployment was conducted as part of the implementation of the truce struck with Hamas in January.

Israeli soldiers from the 162nd "Steel Formation" Armored Division operating in the Gaza Strip, in an undated photo published on Dec. 29, 2024. Credit: IDF.
Israeli soldiers from the 162nd “Steel Formation” Armored Division operating in the Gaza Strip, in an undated photo published on Dec. 29, 2024. Credit: IDF.

The Israel Defense Forces redeployed from the Netzarim Corridor in central Gaza to outposts along the perimeter of the Strip as part of the implementation of the hostages-terrorists swap agreement with Hamas.

“Forces from 162nd Division, 143rd Division and 99th Division under the Southern Command have been deployed at several points in the Gaza Strip region to strengthen the defensive layer for the residents of the western Negev and the State of Israel,” the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said on Friday.

Senior officers of the IDF’s Southern Command held a field assessment along with fighters on the ground in anticipation of the next phase of the release of the Israeli captives held in the Gaza Strip, the military said.

The IDF began to withdraw from the Netzarim Corridor in late January, enabling the return of displaced Gaza residents to the northern Strip.

Defense Minister Israel Katz emphasized that Israel will continue to strictly enforce the ceasefires, both with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, warning that any violation will be met with a strong response. Meanwhile, Gazan residents have been cautioned against approaching IDF troops, including near the Rafah Crossing and the Philadelphi Corridor along the Egyptian border.

On Wednesday, IDF fighters fired on suspects who posed a threat to them in several parts of the Gaza Strip, the army said.

In one instance in southern Gaza, soldiers identified suspects and fired warning shots to distance them. After the suspects continued advancing toward the troops, the troops fired “additional shots to remove the threat.”

Researchers say traces of repeated fire use deep inside South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave suggest early human ancestors were harnessing naturally occurring fires far earlier than previously confirmed.
The U.S. Justice Department recognized six first responders, including members of the security team at Temple Israel who stopped a Hezbollah-inspired attacker who drove a vehicle into the synagogue.
“They are going along the southern ‘highway,’ which is totally safe, secure, and pristine,” the president said.
An advisory committee for the private liberal arts college stated that the measure lacked mission alignment, community consensus and financial viability.
“We do not have the necessary unanimity that we need for this decision,” said the E.U. foreign policy chief.
The method can extract meaning even from material that has been altered by time, radiation or mixing processes.