Displaced Gazans watch World Cup from the ruins

16 Jun 2026, 11:02 AM
Displaced Gazans watch World Cup from the ruins

GAZA, June 16 — Fadi Al-Arawi, a footballer in the Gaza Strip Premier League, hasn’t been able to take the pitch since pro sports were suspended when Israel launched strikes on the Palestinian enclave more than two years ago. Like most Gazans, he no longer even has a home where he can watch the World Cup on TV.

As Saturday’s match between Qatar and Switzerland was about to get under way, he wore his old Gaza Sports Club professional uniform and medals he had picked up at international competitions.

He hovered in the darkness over a flickering laptop, trying to get an internet signal to watch the match with a group of friends in a room in a school converted into a shelter for Gazans displaced by Israel’s military campaign.

“See, this is the internet, it’s starting to cut out and the match hasn’t even started yet,” Al-Arawi, 38, told Reuters in Khan Younis as Israeli drones hummed overhead. “Can you hear the drones? We might live or die, we might be bombed.”

Much of Gaza has been destroyed and its infrastructure heavily damaged during Israel’s two-year military assault in the territory, launched after the October 2023 Hamas incursion.

Despite an October 2025 truce, Israel has continued to attack Gaza, and Hamas has so far rebuffed calls to lay down its arms in exchange for Israel withdrawing its troops.

‘Despite everything, we will watch the matches'

Nearly the entire population of more than two million Palestinians lives in a narrow strip along the coast, mainly in tents and damaged buildings.

Alaa Babli, who runs the Royal Cafe in Gaza City, installed two alternative power lines and a backup battery to ensure late-night matches can still be screened once fuel-powered generators shut down after midnight.

Hani Abu Rizq, who came to watch a match beneath flags of Egypt and Morocco hanging on the cafe wall, said Gazans are never free of fear when out in public.

“The cafe could be targeted,” he said. “Something next to me could be targeted and I could lose my life... But despite everything we are suffering, we are continuing, and we will watch the matches.”

The Palestinian Football Association says 1,000 athletes were among the 73,000 Palestinians killed by Israel since 2023, from children and amateurs in all sports to referees and professionals.

Israel has also destroyed around 285 sports facilities — some completely bulldozed, others bombed. Israel has converted stadiums into detention camps, some of which became notorious for allegations of mistreatment of prisoners there, which Israel denies.

The enclave’s flagship Al-Yarmouk Stadium in Gaza City, where Al-Arawi and other professionals once played in front of thousands of spectators, is now a tent city for displaced families.

“Since the Israeli war of extermination in 2023, Palestinian sports have been a primary target of the Israeli military machine,” said Mustafa Siam of the Palestinian Football Association.

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