The UN said 70% of Gaza in Gaza have been “in Israel’s militarized zone, under displacement or both.”
Last week, a new evacuation order was issued last week after Israel declared unsafe blockbusters in Gaza.
On Friday, Gaza's NBC news team caught people looking for safety, some driving in a beaten truck, while others used donkey-pulled trolleys, while others fled the walk.
“I’ve been displaced four times back and forth,” said Yusra Abu Warda of the Jabaliya refugee camp in northern Gaza. "There is no place, no shelter. I'll stay on the street."
Despite the evacuation order, other residents gave up on moving, exhausted or disillusioned, to escape again.
“Last year, we saw hundreds of thousands of forced from region to region, but now people are exhausted,” said Louise Waterridge, spokesman for the Bank of Relief Engineering, who spoke to NBC News in Amman, Jordan. "They're just too tired to move."
After returning home during a six-week ceasefire in January and February, Watridge said many Palestinians are now ignoring new orders and are unsure of their safety no matter where they move.
“They just keep their attitude and accept that no matter where they go, they won’t be safe.”
No aid has entered Gaza since March 2, and the risk of famine jeopardizes Gaza's population, and even Israel's closest allies have caused alarm.
A source familiar with the plan told Reuters that the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is intended to start working in the enclave by the end of May, delivering aid to Gaza through a so-called security hub, and aid groups will handle the allocation.
Waterridge said the plan “essentially baits people with food, move around, and be forcibly displaced.”
"Will this be used to drive people out of the area? Because if people go hungry, they will go."
"If the intention is the intention to really feed people, then that can be done tomorrow," Waterridge said. "So it does question what the intention is."
The group denied that Israel accused Hamas of stealing aid.
A senior Israeli security official said last week that “humanitarian lockdowns will continue and humanitarian plans can only be implemented after the operational phase begins and large-scale civilian evacuation in the south.”
They added that unlike in the past, the military “will stay in every area it ensures to prevent the return of terror.”
In further reporting that Palestinians can move outside Gaza, the massive internal displacement of Palestinians is due to further reporting. Earlier this year, Trump said Jordan and Egypt could recruit Palestinians from Gaza.
Sources told NBC News on Friday that the Trump administration may be developing a plan to move up to 1 million Palestinians from the Gaza Strip to Libya.
The plan has been seriously considered enough that the government has discussed the plan with Libyan leaders, two people who know it directly and a former U.S. official said.
The same three sources said that a final agreement has not been reached and Israel has been informed of the government's discussion.
The State Council and the National Security Commission did not respond to multiple requests for comment. However, after the publication, the spokesperson denied that the reports were true.