The China Mail - Gaza on the cusp of civil war

USD -
AED 3.672497
AFN 66.191377
ALL 82.409158
AMD 382.364716
ANG 1.790403
AOA 916.999862
ARS 1451.506198
AUD 1.49525
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.703383
BAM 1.665914
BBD 2.01862
BDT 122.588394
BGN 1.66625
BHD 0.377016
BIF 2964.783244
BMD 1
BND 1.285929
BOB 6.950537
BRL 5.494202
BSD 1.002283
BTN 90.035945
BWP 13.176948
BYN 2.893477
BYR 19600
BZD 2.015724
CAD 1.370035
CDF 2165.000046
CHF 0.79243
CLF 0.022955
CLP 900.500141
CNY 6.996399
CNH 6.97764
COP 3763.9
CRC 497.606514
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.921687
CZK 20.59865
DJF 178.480775
DKK 6.35704
DOP 62.97167
DZD 129.572322
EGP 47.662699
ERN 15
ETB 155.747822
EUR 0.85116
FJD 2.273301
FKP 0.741981
GBP 0.743625
GEL 2.694971
GGP 0.741981
GHS 10.52376
GIP 0.741981
GMD 73.999778
GNF 8762.276301
GTQ 7.682217
GYD 209.69157
HKD 7.784455
HNL 26.423114
HRK 6.414597
HTG 131.173792
HUF 327.450499
IDR 16713
ILS 3.186799
IMP 0.741981
INR 89.867965
IQD 1313.021184
IRR 42125.000022
ISK 125.290498
JEP 0.741981
JMD 160.866769
JOD 0.708996
JPY 156.601021
KES 129.000046
KGS 87.417704
KHR 4016.132673
KMF 420.000148
KPW 900.043914
KRW 1444.380263
KWD 0.30753
KYD 0.835257
KZT 503.189922
LAK 21666.581489
LBP 89765.84726
LKR 310.693174
LRD 177.901569
LSL 16.67544
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.418988
MAD 9.124028
MDL 16.822541
MGA 4580.841894
MKD 52.399683
MMK 2099.836459
MNT 3559.101845
MOP 8.035536
MRU 39.932028
MUR 46.250192
MVR 15.450259
MWK 1737.960171
MXN 17.96393
MYR 4.058037
MZN 63.910138
NAD 16.675582
NGN 1448.290373
NIO 36.882296
NOK 10.059301
NPR 144.058398
NZD 1.732395
OMR 0.384518
PAB 1.002291
PEN 3.374247
PGK 4.269093
PHP 58.932035
PKR 280.708421
PLN 3.59082
PYG 6579.956048
QAR 3.663938
RON 4.337802
RSD 99.823995
RUB 81.750344
RWF 1460.287986
SAR 3.750298
SBD 8.136831
SCR 13.813735
SDG 601.471583
SEK 9.194009
SGD 1.285321
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.049785
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 571.798486
SRD 38.126497
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.868469
SVC 8.769942
SYP 11059.149576
SZL 16.670074
THB 31.632504
TJS 9.255969
TMT 3.51
TND 2.91437
TOP 2.40776
TRY 42.964602
TTD 6.806586
TWD 31.336504
TZS 2470.316002
UAH 42.512564
UGX 3628.589194
UYU 39.241574
UZS 12052.708239
VES 297.770445
VND 26300
VUV 120.744286
WST 2.776281
XAF 558.729658
XAG 0.013944
XAU 0.000232
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.806373
XDR 0.694877
XOF 558.727279
XPF 101.583462
YER 238.449909
ZAR 16.538603
ZMK 9001.220636
ZMW 22.2756
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    23.051

    -0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.13

    +0.13%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    13.58

    +0.74%

  • AZN

    -0.0100

    92.51

    -0.01%

  • NGG

    0.3200

    77.77

    +0.41%

  • BCC

    -0.7400

    73.79

    -1%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    49.3

    +0.39%

  • RIO

    0.1200

    80.52

    +0.15%

  • BTI

    0.2791

    56.55

    +0.49%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    23.57

    +0.81%

  • RBGPF

    0.3400

    81.05

    +0.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    15.49

    -0.45%

  • BP

    0.3000

    34.75

    +0.86%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    41.11

    -0.66%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    13.23

    +0.6%


Gaza on the cusp of civil war




In the days following a fragile ceasefire in early October 2025, the Gaza Strip – already devastated by two years of war – has been shaken by a wave of internecine violence. The militant group that has ruled the enclave for nearly two decades has responded to the power vacuum left by Israel’s withdrawal by turning its guns on rival militias and local clans. What began as an attempt to re‑establish order in lawless streets has degenerated into summary executions, sieges and pitched battles that many residents say risk pushing Gaza to the brink of civil war.

From ceasefire to crackdown
A United States‑brokered truce between Israel and the rulers of Gaza took effect in early October, ending a bloody two‑year conflict and leading to a prisoner‑hostage exchange. The agreement envisaged the group’s disarmament and the handover of civilian administration to a Palestinian technocratic committee under international supervision. Yet just days after the ceasefire, militants re‑emerged from their tunnels, freed the last living Israeli hostages and deployed thousands of fighters in uniform across Gaza’s ruined streets. Security officials say they killed thirty‑two members of a clan‑affiliated gang in Gaza City that they accuse of looting aid and collaborating with Israel, while losing six of their own men. A widely circulated video showed masked gunmen ordering seven blindfolded men to kneel before shooting them; bystanders shouted religious slogans and denounced the victims as traitors. The group later confirmed that the executions were real and justified them as punishment for treason.

Officials sympathetic to the crackdown argue that the militants simply stepped into the vacuum created when Israeli forces targeted and dismantled the local police during the war. As the regular security apparatus collapsed, powerful families and armed factions – some reportedly receiving arms or cash from Israel – seized control of neighbourhoods, hijacked aid convoys and terrorised residents. According to Gaza’s truckers’ union, gangs “looted aid and killed people under the protection of the occupation”. Israeli sources acknowledge providing support to anti‑militant clans such as the Popular Forces led by Yasser Abu Shabab, though they deny involvement in theft. The result has been a patchwork of competing militias vying for influence in a landscape strewn with debris.

Sieges and summary executions
The militant rulers have sought to present their campaign as a restoration of law and order. Their newly formed Sahem (Arrow) unit comprises intelligence and enforcement personnel tasked with dismantling armed gangs and seizing weapons. In several neighbourhoods their fighters have directed traffic, appointed temporary administrators and offered an amnesty: anyone accused of collaboration who had not shed blood could surrender their arms and have their record expunged. Officials say more than seventy gang members have taken advantage of the offer and that over fifty “gang hubs” have been dismantled. Videos released by the group’s internal media arm depict uniformed officers patrolling markets and reassuring residents that a “merciful hand” awaits those who repent.

Behind this veneer of due process lies a brutal reality. On the first day of the ceasefire, fighters surrounded the Doghmush family compound in Gaza City and laid siege for three days. Members of the Doghmush clan, one of Gaza’s most powerful families, were accused of murdering a journalist and a militant commander and of looting humanitarian aid. When seven men on Hamas’ wanted list refused to surrender, security forces stormed the neighbourhood and killed more than fifteen people. Witnesses described troops going door to door, verifying identities and torturing detainees; some victims had fingernails ripped out. Rights groups such as Al Mezan and the Palestinian Independent Commission for Human Rights have condemned these extrajudicial killings.

Similar scenes unfolded in Khan Younis, where fighters targeted the Majadla clan after accusing them of murdering two resistance fighters. Local reports say the Israeli army intervened during the shoot‑out, killing seven militants. The militia later claimed to have killed Ahmad Tarabin, the right‑hand man of Yasser Abu Shabab, and to have attacked gangs led by Rami Hillis in Gaza City. In separate operations the Sahem unit publicly executed three men it accused of collaborating with Israel. Palestinian analyst Reham Owda says these actions are designed not only to punish collaborators but to demonstrate that the group’s security officers should be part of any future governing body.

Clans, militias and the spectre of civil war
The violence has exposed deep fissures within Gaza’s social fabric. The Doghmush, Hilles and Majadla families have longstanding feuds with Hamas dating back to the movement’s takeover of the Strip in 2007. Many of these clans maintain their own armed wings and have at times aligned with Fatah or the Palestinian Authority. During the recent war they took advantage of the chaos to settle scores and, according to multiple reports, to cooperate with Israeli forces. Saleh Aljafarawi, a 28‑year‑old journalist who gained prominence for his war coverage, was shot dead while reporting on fighting between Hamas and the Doghmush clan; his body, still wearing a press jacket, was later recovered from a truck. Residents who fled the gunfire told reporters they were “running from their own people” rather than Israeli bombardment.

The risk of wider civil strife grew when a new militia calling itself “The People’s Army – Forces of Northern Gaza” released a video declaring that it had taken control of parts of northern Gaza. Nine masked men, armed with rifles and seated around a table, pledged to rebuild the area and provide security but warned Hamas to stay away. The group’s statement promised “decisive force” against any attempt by Hamas to enter its territory and proclaimed that “the era of your tyranny has ended”. The emergence of this militia, coupled with ongoing clashes with established clans, has prompted fears that the Palestinian territory could descend into outright civil war.

In addition to the People’s Army, militias led by Hussam al‑Astal in Khan Younis and Yasser Abu Shabab in Rafah continue to defy Hamas. These groups reportedly receive weapons from Israel and have recruited hundreds of fighters, paying attractive salaries. According to a security official quoted in local reports, Hamas had killed Abu Shabab’s lieutenant and was working to eliminate him. Abu Shabab has denied collaboration and vowed to resist. Sheikh Husni al‑Mughni, head of Gaza’s Higher Committee for Tribal Affairs, insists that the clans support the crackdown and that justice has been served, but many families now demand weapons to defend themselves. Human rights advocates warn that such dynamics could ignite a cycle of revenge killings.

Political implications
The internal conflict has reverberated across Palestinian politics. The Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the West Bank, condemned what it described as “horrible crimes” and “vile terrorism” in Gaza. Officials in Ramallah argue that the violence undermines efforts to unify Palestinian institutions under a single law and weapon. They accuse Hamas of bombarding clan houses with rockets and rocket‑propelled grenades in an attempt to “break the backbone of clans”. At least nineteen Doghmush members and eight Hamas fighters were killed in one confrontation, according to internal ministry sources.

The United States, which brokered the ceasefire and proposed a 20‑point peace plan for Gaza, has offered mixed signals. On his way to the Middle East, President Donald Trump told reporters that Hamas had been granted a temporary green light to police Gaza. “They do want to stop the problems, and they’ve been open about it, and we gave them approval for a period of time,” he said. He later compared the crackdown to his own fight against violent gangs and said that killing gang members did not bother him. Nonetheless, he reiterated that Hamas must disarm and warned that if it refuses, it will be disarmed “quickly and perhaps violently”.

Israeli leaders, meanwhile, insist that the war is not over until Hamas is dismantled. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has acknowledged arming clans opposed to Hamas, and Israeli forces remain in control of parts of northern Gaza and Rafah. Observers say the internal violence may provide Israel and its allies with leverage to force a demilitarisation deal. However, the sight of militants executing alleged collaborators in public squares has also drawn international criticism and could complicate the formation of a new governing authority.

A fragile truce in jeopardy
The ceasefire that began with the release of Israeli hostages may yet collapse under the weight of Gaza’s internal wars. In addition to the Doghmush confrontation, reports have surfaced of clashes with the Majadla and Hilles clans, as well as targeted assassinations of suspected collaborators. In one weekend alone, at least twenty‑seven people, including a journalist and a son of a senior Hamas official, were killed in battles between Hamas and the Dughmush clan. Another report put the clan’s casualties at fifty‑two, with twelve militants killed, including the son of senior official Bassem Naim; witnesses said fighters used ambulances to storm the neighbourhood.

Despite the bloodshed, some residents welcome the return of uniformed officers to the streets. A medic from Jabaliya refugee camp told reporters that seeing police again provided a sense of normalcy after months of anarchy. Others fear the crackdown has unleashed forces beyond anyone’s control. In social media posts, some Gaza residents argue that the gangs targeted by Hamas were “more dangerous than the occupation” itself and that swift justice was necessary. Critics counter that the extrajudicial killings violate international law and risk fuelling cycles of revenge.

The outcome may hinge on whether the rival clans and newly formed militias decide to accept the amnesty or continue to fight. The interior ministry has set a deadline for suspects to surrender, warning that anyone who fails to do so will face arrest and prosecution. Hossam al‑Astal, a militia leader with ties to Israel, has already rejected the ultimatum, calling the fighters “rats” and urging them to repent before it is too late. As the deadline approaches, many Gazans brace for further bloodletting.

Conclusion
Gaza is teetering on the edge. What was intended as a pause in the war with Israel has exposed the territory’s underlying fractures: feuding clans, armed gangs, foreign proxies and a ruling movement determined to hold onto its weapons. The current campaign may succeed in dismantling some militias and restoring a measure of order, but at the cost of deepening social rifts and undermining prospects for a peaceful transition. Unless a credible, inclusive security arrangement emerges – one that curbs the power of rival gangs and ensures accountability for all – the threat of civil war will continue to loom over the battered enclave.