Canadians at Gaza border speak of hopes dashed after other foreigners exit region, leaving them behind - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:55 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Canadians at Gaza border speak of hopes dashed after other foreigners exit region, leaving them behind

Canadians stuck in southern Gaza grew increasingly frustratedon Thursday as they waited for approval to cross into Egypt, while officials in Canada reiterated that they're still working to make that happen.

'We're confused,' says teen amid news that no Canadians were able to cross into Egypt Thursday

Rafah border crossing opens for foreign nationals for 1st time since war began

10 months ago
Duration 0:01
Some foreign passport holders have been allowed to enter the Rafah border crossing from Gaza to Egypt on Wednesday for the first time since the Israel-Hamas war began more than three weeks ago.

Canadians stuck in southern Gaza grew increasingly frustratedon Thursday as they waited for approval to cross into Egypt, while officials in Canada reiterated that they're still working to make that happen.

Canada was not among the countries with citizens in the region on a list of those allowed to cross published by Gaza border authorities Wednesday,although other countries were, including Japan, the U.K., Finland,Australia, the Czech Republic and Bulgaria.

Only one Canadian was reportedly able to exit an international worker who was on a different list as the crossing opened to a few hundred foreign passport holders for the first time since the Israel-Hamas war began on Oct. 7.

Canadian Said Alhassoimi, 16, said he and his family rushed to the Rafah border crossing on Wednesday after getting a call from Global Affairs Canada and hearing it was opening, only to find out Canadians were not among the foreigners allowed to cross.

'Our names were not on that list'

"We got a call [Tuesday] from Global Affairs and they told us to just get ready. I didn't know what that meant," Alhassoimi told CBC News on Wednesday. When hearrived at the border, he learned that people from "all overthe world" were given permission to cross.

"We checked our names and sadly our names were not on that list and we're confused, because we talked to the Canadian government and they said we were registered."

WATCH |Canadian teen stuck in Gaza turned back at border:

Canadian teen stuck in Gaza turned back at border

10 months ago
Duration 3:39
Said Alhassoimi, 16, says he and his family rushed to the Rafah border crossing Wednesday after getting a call from Global Affairs Canada and hearing it was opening, only to find out Canadians were not among the foreigners allowed to cross.

Alhassoimialso spoke to CBC News last Friday when he and his family had been waiting by the border for three days. He said he wastrying to "keep a strong face" and hide his sadness as he copes, along with his 14-year-old brother and sisters, who are 13, nine and three.

Some people trying to flee the bombings have repeatedly gone to the Egyptian-controlled crossing over the last three weeks after hearing it might open.

Worried about newborn without citizenship

Ahmad Abualjedian, a Canadian permanent resident living in Brantford, Ont., has family in Gaza and said he is desperate for help getting his wife and newborn daughter out of the besieged Palestinian territory.

"I want to see my daughter to hug her, to touch her," said Abualjedian,who was with his wife before the war began, but wasthen separatedfrom her because he had to return to Canada in September.

All he has for nowis a 57-second video of his daughter, Sila, who was born on Oct. 23. He sayshe's very worried because neither his daughter nor other family members still in Gaza have Canadian citizenship.

WATCH |'I cannot sleep,' says manwaiting for word on his family in Gaza:

'I cannot sleep,' says man who is waiting for word on his family in Gaza

10 months ago
Duration 9:31
Ahmad Abualjedian, a Canadian permanent resident with family in Gaza, says he is desperate for help getting his wife and baby out of the besieged strip. 'I want to see my daughter to hug her, to touch her.'

More than 300 foreign passport holders and more than 70 seriously injured Palestinians were allowed to leave Gaza at the Rafah border crossing on Wednesday, the first such departure since the Israel-Hamas war began nearly four weeks ago.

"We continue to work around the clock to secure a window for Canadians to exitGaza. We are communicating directly with Canadians, giving them the latest information regarding the situation," said a statement from Global Affairs Canada on Thursday. The department added that Foreign Minister Mlanie Joly "is in contact with both her Israeli and Egyptian counterparts and our embassies are pushing through their channels as well."

WATCH |No Canadians on list of people allowed through Rafah crossing yet:

No Canadians on list of people allowed through Rafah crossing yet

10 months ago
Duration 0:01
The Rafah border crossing from Gaza to Egypt is open for foreign nationals for a second day on Thursday. The Palestinian Border Authority published a list of about 600 people from 15 countries approved to cross the border, but reportedly no Canadians are on it.

No Canadians left Gaza via the Rafah crossing on Thursday, according to a government source with direct knowledge of the situation, who asked not to be identified because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

U.S. President Joe Biden told reporters at the White House on Thursday that74 Americans with dual citizenship have beenable to leave Gaza through the Rafah crossing.

Canada has relatively large contingentin Gaza

Global Affairs has said it expects foreign and dual nationals will be able to leave Gaza on a country-by-country basis. Canada will be assigned a specific departure date for some 450 Canadians who are registered with the department in Gaza and West Bank.

"Canada has one of the largest contingents of nationals in Gaza," said a statement from Global Affairs Canada on Wednesday night, which had noted countries on the initial list had fewer citizens in the territory. "We expect further crossings daily over the coming days."

Mahmoud Nasser, anotherCanadian man trying to get out of Gaza with his family, said Global Affairs Canada has asked him to gather his documents and be prepared to leave at any moment through the border crossing.

A woman on the right waits for an official to look over her travel documents at a border crossing.
Palestinians with dual nationality register to cross to Egypt on the Gaza Strip side of the border crossing in Rafah on Thursday. (Hatem Ali/The Associated Press)

Mahmoud Nasser saidhis wife, who has a Brazilian passport, got a call from Global Affairs on Thursday during which an official confirmed that Nasser, his wife, his Canadian father and brother and his Palestinian sister-in-law were all registered with Ottawa to evacuate.

While the possibility of an evacuation is positive news, Nasser said he's worried about being able to get his wife, who is pregnant, and sister-in law across once Canadians are allowed to leave Gaza.

"It's kind of a dilemma for all of us," he said. "We're not sure what to do with this situation."

WATCH | Rafah crossing filled with bittersweet emotions:

Rafah crossing filled with bittersweet emotions

10 months ago
Duration 0:46
The Rafah crossing in Gaza was packed with people trying to exit the war-torn area, but getting the chance to escape wasn't a feel-good moment for everyone as some were conflicted about having to leave loved ones behind.

He saidGlobal Affairs did not provide a date or time for a potential evacuation but told his family to watch a list being published online by the General Authority for Border Crossings in Gaza that has been detailing the foreigners allowed to leave since Wednesday.

Dalia Salim, a resident of London, Ont., who is trying to get her 66-year-old Canadian father out of Gaza, said she was trying to reach her father to tell him to head toward the Rafah crossing ahead of a possible evacuation.

Salim said herfatherwashoping to leave with his mother but isworried she could be barred from leaving because she is Palestinian.

With files from The Canadian Press