The
Background to the Outburst
The total population of the Gaza Strip in the beginning of 1948 was almost 80,000. By the end of the year, the population more than tripled, after almost 200,000 refugees from various Palestinian cities and villages flowed into the Strip during and after the Palestine War
. The refugees were allocated to eight camps. After the signing of the Egypt-Israel Armistice Agreement
on 24 February 1949, the Strip was ruled by an Egyptian military governor, who had the same privileges enjoyed by the British High Commissioner before the
In 1953, the Egyptian government, which had come to power upon the Egyptian Revolution of 1952
, was still finding its way on the foreign policy front while grappling with internal issues when it agreed to a plan to relocate 12,000 refugee families from the Gaza Strip to plots of land in the northwestern Sinai desert (after reclaiming the land by redirecting portions of Nile water to it annually). Negotiated between the Egyptian government and the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East
(UNRWA), the plan had the support of the
In 1953 Israeli forces began attacking the Palestinian refugee camps on the Gaza Strip, in an attempt to contain individual operations targeting Israeli settlements located near the borders of the Strip. On the night of 28 August, an Israeli military unit launched an attack on the
Israeli Raid on 28 February 1955
In the beginning of 1954, US Secretary of State John Foster Dulles
hoped to bring all countries in the
However, Israeli expansionists were not ready to proceed toward a peace agreement with Egypt, which became apparent after a “scandal” involving Israeli minister of defense Pinhas Lavon was revealed. Lavon had activated an espionage network inside Egypt, ordering several operations against select Egyptian, British, and US targets; the goal was to create instability to induce the British government to retain its troops in the Suez Canal zone. Israel’s aversion to peace was made even clearer when the new Minister of Defense, David Ben-Gurion — who was sworn in on 21 February 1955, after Lavon’s resignation — cemented his iron-grip policies with a devastating raid on the Gaza Strip, the most violent since the Egypt-Israel Armistice Agreement was signed.
On the evening of 28 February 1955, an Israeli paratrooper unit attacked an Egyptian military camp near the railway station in
Popular Response to the Refugee Transfer Scheme
Popular movements against the Sinai relocation project had started as soon as Egyptian newspapers first published hints of a plan in May 1953. But on 1 March 1955, right after the Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip, a mass demonstration took place at the Official Palestine School in Gaza City, where teachers, students, bus drivers, and store owners chanted: “No relocation, no settlement/ Down with US agents” and “They drafted the Sinai project in ink/ We’ll erase it with blood.” Egyptian police forces opened fire on the protestors, killing
The protesters—communists,
Soon after, the military governor of the Gaza Strip, Major General
However, those promises were quickly broken. Refaat called on Egyptian military battalions stationed in the Sinai Desert to launch a massive arrest campaign on the night of 8–9 March 1955; members of the Supreme National Committee, as well as many teachers, students, and workers, were arrested; they were sent to the Central Gaza Prison and to Arish and then transferred to Egypt’s General Prison, where they remained until July 1957. Refaat also dismantled the UNRWA Teachers’ Syndicate, ordering strong penal measures against anyone who instigated strikes or sit-ins.
After the Outburst
The Israeli raid on Egyptian military targets on the Gaza Strip on 28 February, as well as the mass protests that followed, constituted a change in the course of Egypt’s 1952 Revolution and the approaches of its leaders. In a speech addressing students of the
As to plans to relocate refugees outside the Gaza Strip, they were no longer part of Egypt’s policy for years to come. The policy would become the preserve of Israel after its occupation of the Strip and the Sinai Peninsula in June 1967. One of the diverse measures that Israel undertook during its occupation was to relocate thousands of refugees in the Egyptian town of Rafah in what was to be known as
Cossali, Paul and Clive Robson. Stateless in Gaza. London: Zed Books, 1986.
Filiu, Jean-Pierre. Gaza: A History. London: Hurst, 2014.
Palumbo, Michael. Imperial Israel. London: Bloomsbury, 1992.
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