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Ministers trying to secure release of more Britons as two aid workers flee Gaza

Around 200 UK citizens have registered as being in the strip with the Foreign Office.

Sam Blewett
Thursday 02 November 2023 10:55 EDT
The UK is pushing for Britons trapped in the Gaza Strip to be allowed to leave after the border crossing with Egypt was opened (Fatima Shbair/AP)
The UK is pushing for Britons trapped in the Gaza Strip to be allowed to leave after the border crossing with Egypt was opened (Fatima Shbair/AP) (AP)

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Efforts are under way to secure the release of more British citizens from Gaza after two UK aid workers were among hundreds of foreign nationals able to flee through the Rafah crossing.

Dozens of seriously injured Palestinians were also allowed to leave the strip, which is home to more than two million people, for the first time since the war with Israel began nearly a month ago.

There are hopes more UK nationals could make it out and into Egypt on Thursday, the PA news agency understands, after around 200 registered in Gaza with the Foreign Office.

Labour frontbencher Jess Phillips warned that Britons were not getting out quickly enough, arguing that the Government’s diplomatic efforts did not appear to be having “much sway”.

She also suggested that the Israeli’s military action against Hamas would only end in “death and destruction” as she called for “peaceful political solutions” to be negotiated.

The Foreign Office provided the Israeli and Egyptian authorities with a list of British nationals and their dependents, prioritising by medical vulnerability. The total is thought to be in the low hundreds.

Border Force officials deployed in Egypt to help UK nationals have been bolstered by the arrival of a rapid deployment team from the Foreign Office and psychosocial support experts from the British Red Cross.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said it was proving “very difficult” to secure humanitarian pauses in the conflict but the UK would keep pushing “for as long as it takes”.

“We, the US, voices all over the world have been pushing for, you know, these humanitarian pauses – temporary, localised, specifically for humanitarian purposes. They’ve proven to be very, very difficult to achieve,” he told reporters at an AI Safety Summit in England.

He said the UK position remains that “calls for a broad ceasefire are premature.”

Downing Street confirmed that two UK aid workers were among those to make it through the Rafah crossing, which is the only gateway to Gaza not controlled by Israel.

Israeli forces were pushing deeper into Gaza as air strikes struck a refugee camp for a second time in as many days, adding to the Palestinian death toll of thousands.

Ms Phillips, MP for Birmingham Yardley, told BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme that there “doesn’t seem to be much movement in getting British people out of Gaza” as she took aim at Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s diplomatic efforts.

“What worries me and what worries my constituent who is sat at home waiting for his 16 family members, one of whom is four-months-old, is that we’re not seeing any British names put onto the list of those who are crossing,” she said.

There is a list of people that are British nationals – 200 I believe is the figure that I have – and our focus is on getting them out as quickly as we possibly can

Cabinet minister Michelle Donelan

She noted that there were 400 names on the US list of those being told they could travel through the Rafah crossing on Thursday, while there were none explicitly listed as British. It is possible however that UK nationals are listed as either dual or “international” under their citizenship.

Ms Phillips said that Mr Sunak’s social media pictures of diplomacy were “all very well and good for Twitter but it doesn’t seem that the British Government are having that much sway in getting their people out to Egypt”.

Cabinet minister Michelle Donelan said the Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary James Cleverly were continuing efforts to get more Britons out.

“The Foreign Office have said that some people have managed to get over that border and we are anticipating that there will be more coming,” the Science Secretary told GB News.

“There is a list of people that are British nationals – 200 I believe is the figure that I have – and our focus is on getting them out as quickly as we possibly can.”

But she also stressed the challenges.

“We’re not in full control of that border, as you know, so it is very difficult,” she told Sky News.

“But the Foreign Secretary and the Prime Minister have said multiple times it is our top priority to get those British nationals out as quickly as we possibly can.”

Mr Sunak discussed the crisis with UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres at the AI summit the Prime Minister is hosting at Bletchley Park.

“The leaders then discussed the worsening humanitarian situation in Gaza and agreed on the importance of urgently scaling up the delivery of life-saving humanitarian aid,” a Downing Street spokesman said.

“The Prime Minister set out the work the UK is doing to support, including doubling aid funding for the United Nations and others’ work in Gaza and pre-positioning emergency supplies and equipment in Egypt.

“The Prime Minister and the secretary-general agreed on the need to reinvigorate international efforts to reach a lasting resolution to the conflict and progress work towards a two-state solution.”

On Wednesday Mr Sunak used a call with Egypt’s president Abdel Fattah El-Sisi to thank him for his efforts to get the first British nationals to leave through the Rafah border.

The UK has a Border Force team in Cairo, with consular officials in Arish, near Rafah, to provide support for Britons who leave Gaza.

The Palestinian death toll in the Israel-Hamas war has reached 9,061, including 3,760 under-18s, according to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza. In the occupied West Bank, more than 122 Palestinians have been killed in violence and Israeli raids.

Tel Aviv launched its operation on Gaza, including a siege on food, fuel, water and medicine, in response to Hamas’s raid that killed more than 1,400 people, mostly civilians slain in the October 7 rampage. Around 240 were also taken into Gaza by the militant group.

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