Israel restricts Palestinians to one third of Gaza
- Miriam Berger and Júlia Ledur | The Washington Post
- 16 hours ago
- 3 min read
Israel redraws Gaza map, limiting Palestinians to a third of the enclave
The Washington Post
May 1, 2025
By Miriam Berger and Júlia Ledur

Since breaking the ceasefire, Israeli forces have declared about 70 percent of Gaza either a military “red zone” or under evacuation.
In the six weeks since Israel resumed its war in Gaza, Israeli forces have dramatically altered its map, declaring about 70 percent of the enclave either a military “red zone” or under evacuation, according to the United Nations, and pushing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians into ever-shrinking pockets.
The Israeli military says its evacuation orders allow civilians to flee ahead of fighting, and those who remain could be considered combatants. In practice, Palestinians say, the evacuation orders often force them to flee under fire.
Recent evacuation orders have covered border areas and population centers and have displaced more than 420,000 people, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
In addition, Israel has enlarged its “security zone,” also called a buffer zone, along Gaza’s borders with Israel and Egypt. The military says the move is meant to prevent a Hamas attack similar to the Oct. 7, 2023, assault on southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people.
Israeli officials have signaled they do not intend to relinquish this territory. These areas, where the military has deployed, are considered “no-go zones” and Palestinians risk being shot if they approach.
The largest such expansion has been in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, which Palestinians were ordered last month to evacuate as Israeli troops moved in. Rafah is on the border with Egypt, and previously the Israeli-controlled Philadelphi Corridor along that border served as part of the buffer zone. This month, Israel said the buffer zone now extends north to the city of Khan Younis and the newly declared Morag Corridor.

Timeline of evacuation orders and restricted zones
These significant changes in the Gaza map have occurred since Israel ended the two-month-old ceasefire with Hamas on March 18 and resumed its military campaign.
While Israel’s leaders say these moves are necessary for security and to pressure Hamas to return the Israeli hostages it holds, some Israeli officials have also signaled that the territorial changes could presage an extended occupation of Gaza that could last for months or more.
Humanitarian agencies have warned that the evacuation orders and expansion of buffer zones have cut off thousands of Palestinians from their land and from aid, which is in short supply since Israel put Gaza under a complete siege nearly two months ago.
Areas now under evacuation order include half of the enclave’s water wells and many medical and other vital facilities, according to OCHA. Not all civilians have left some areas that are under evacuation orders.

Gaza territory under no restrictions has shrunk
by almost half since the end of the ceasefire
The war has killed more than 52,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not differentiate between civilians and combatants.
In the early months of the war, Israeli forces razed buildings and agricultural fields to create an initial buffer zone. Israeli officials said this was necessary to eliminate Hamas tunnels and prevent another attack. Legal experts said the military’s tactics violate international law.
As part of the ceasefire agreement, Israel initially pulled back its troops, retaining a buffer zone about 700 to 1,000 meters (or about half a mile) wide inside Gaza. The area comprised about 17 percent of the enclave, according to the Israeli rights group Gisha, which tracks access in Gaza. These areas were closed military zones, so Palestinians could not reach their land or homes.
Sources: Evacuation areas are from the Israel Defense Forces. Restricted buffer zones were provided by Yaakov Garb of Ben-Gurion University via the Harvard Dataverse repository.
Miriam Berger, a staff writer on The Post's international news desk in Washington, has since Oct. 7 been on assignment in Jerusalem, where she covers Israel, the Palestinian territories and the war in Gaza. Before joining The Post, she was based in Jerusalem and Cairo and was a freelance reporter.follow on X@MiriamABerger
By Júlia Ledur
Júlia Ledur is a graphics reporter covering foreign news at The Washington Post. Before joining The Post in 2021, she worked as a graphics editor at the COVID Tracking Project at the Atlantic. Previously, she was on the graphics team at Reuters, covering Latin American politics, the environment and social issues with data and visuals. follow on X@juledurg