Global News Podcast - Gaza Conflict: Two years on
Episode Date: September 30, 2025To mark two years of the war in Gaza, our correspondents bring you this special episode of the Global News Podcast from the BBC Bureau in Jerusalem. Jon Donnison is joined by our Gaza correspondent Ru...shdi Abualouf, our International Editor Jeremy Bowen, and our Middle East correspondent Yolande Knell. They discuss the history of the conflict, their memories of the October 7th attacks, and respond to questions from BBC World Service listeners. As talk of a potential ceasefire brokered by the US President Donald Trump and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dominates the news agenda, we look back at the impact this war has had on people living in the Gaza Strip and Israel. The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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You're joining us on the balcony of the BBC's Jerusalem Bureau high up.
So we've got a great view.
The occupied West Bank is just about a kilometre behind me over those hills.
And we're about 100 kilometres away from the Gaza Strip,
where Israel is carrying out its air and ground offensive.
But as international journalists, Israel does not allow us into Gaza to report independently and we do a lot of our journalism from here.
On October the 7th, two years ago, Hamas crossed the border from Gaza and attacked Israel, killing over 1,200 people at a music festival in their homes or their places of work.
The Islamist group also took 251 people hostage, taking them back to Gaza, where many were held for months on end.
some are still there almost two years on.
There have been short ceasefires and hostage release deals, but they have quickly collapsed.
Negotiations for a new deal driven by President Trump are ongoing.
At the time we're recording this around 20 living hostages remain in Gaza
and more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israel.
The conflict has dominated the news agenda, sparking protests across the world.
And to mark two years of this conflict, we have gathered questions from BBC listeners to put to a panel of our correspondence.
I'm John Donison, and this is the Global News podcast on the BBC World Service.
Well, I used to be the BBC's correspondent in Gaza for four years between 2009 and 2013, and I'm joined for this programme by three people who know the region very.
very well. I've got Rushdie Abou Alouf, who's joining us from Istanbul. I've got Jeremy Bowen,
who's joining us from London, and here with me in Jerusalem, Yonan Nel. So yeah, I'm a BBC
Middle East correspondent. I've been working in this region for more than 15 years now, and I would
say that the last two years have definitely been the most challenging of my whole career.
And I'm Rushdie Abolov, BBC Gaza correspondent, have been covering this conflict for all
23 years for the BBC.
I'm Jeremy Bowen. I'm the BBC
international editor. I was
Middle East editor for years and
I was based in Jerusalem in the
1990s. I did my first reporting trip
in fact to cover the
conflict in
1991, so going back a long way.
I have been very busy with it
in the last couple of years as well.
Okay, so we've got literally
decades of experience here.
Yoland I'm going to start with you. I mean, you were
working on October the 7th
2023. When you woke up that day and heard the news, what was your reaction? A busy day, I imagine,
and did you think we'd be where we are today? Well, it was a Saturday, so I was on call. It was
the end of the Jewish holidays. And I came rushing into the office pretty early. And I have to say
from the beginning, it was clear that this was something very different from what we'd experienced
before, because as soon as I arrived here, there were rockets on course for Jerusalem. I was rushing into
the safe room where our air raid shelter is when the sirens were going off around Jerusalem.
And my main memory of that day is my own real disbelief as the words were coming out of my mouth,
telling people the news. And it was a very strange experience because we have covered wars
before, we've covered rocket attacks, we've covered hostage crisis even together. And this was
immediately clear that it was on a whole new scale and the kind of rulebook that we'd been
sort of operating on here had to be ripped up and I was very worried too because there were
friends of mine that I was working with that day who had their friends at the Nova Festival and
there were immediately going to be sort of repercussions for people in Gaza where we have our
dear colleagues and many people that I know in Gaza as well.
I'm rusty for you that morning.
It was just normal Saturday morning and you know Saturday is a normal working day in Gaza so
I was about to drive the kids to school, I remember, and suddenly there was rookies flying
from all over Gaza, and I was looking from the balcony and never went to my mind that
this is, you know, Hamas is crossing the border into Israel. I thought maybe Israel did
kill one of the Hamas, like commanders and Hamas is responding, and that was the view
or the initial thought from not just me, all of the journalists that have been.
contacting me and the people.
And, you know, within 10, 15 minutes,
I realized that this is big when I received the first picture
from one of the Hamas people in Gaza,
showing the Hamas militants crossing or close to the border.
I realized that it is big.
I just say to the kids, don't go to school, stay,
and I took the car and drove very fast to the office.
Because you know our office is in central Gaza,
is in the middle of the middle of the Rimal Street,
which some of the area, some of the roof near us,
is overlooking the border with Israel.
So I was in a high up position watching almost rockets flying
and all of the noises, you know, around this October the 7th day,
which is something that will never forget all my life.
We're going to talk to you more, Roshdie, in this program,
about how it's changed your life
and the life of your family.
Jeremy, I mean, you've witnessed many big moments
in the Middle East.
In those early days, you spent a lot of time
down in southern Israel
in the communities that had been hit.
I mean, are you like Yoland?
You recognized immediately
that this was a big deal.
I think it was clear from the first couple of hours.
I was in Ukraine, actually.
I was in Kiev when it all started.
And I woke up and I reached my phone
as millions do, first thing in the morning.
And the first thing I saw were texts on our office group chat, WhatsApp, from Rushdie,
saying hundreds of rockets are being fired into Israel.
It wasn't clear what else was happening beyond that.
And within an hour or so, it was clear that we were in the wrong place.
And we set off on a journey then to Poland and onwards, took a couple of days.
By the Monday morning with my team from Ukraine, we,
arrived in Ashkelon, which is the Israeli town, which is just at the very north of the Gaza
strip. And we were basically there most of the time between then and the end of the year until
Christmas, more or less. And yeah, by then it was clear that, I mean, as we were driving through
Poland, I was looking at the videos coming out and realizing that the mass had done this big
push over the border and that there was a lot of fighting going on. Clearly, it was something that
was going to be very, very different. And then when we got to Ashkelon, within a few days,
the Israeli military, the IDF, allowed us to join various convoys into some of those border
communities, which had been hit by Hamas. I was in Kibbutzkva, Aza, when the Israeli military,
the paratroop brigade, was still in offensive combat positions, dug in around it.
There was still shooting going on. They were clearing buildings in the site or around it,
with gunfire. They were still looking, and they had only just started really, looking for the dead
residents of the kibbutz, and they were putting them in body bags and bringing them out. There were
people there doing that, and there were a lot of dead Hamas operatives there. It was like nothing
I'd seen in this conflict. And after two years, Rushdie, I mean, no one has been more impacted
by this war than the people of Gaza
I think you left the strip
in November, December,
2023. Just give us
your assessment of
people's situation in Gaza
two years on and maybe your own personal
situation. It's very hard to imagine that
they are still alive, you know, they are still surviving.
Every time I talk to my father back in Gaza
or my brothers or my friends
I don't know what to say to them
I mean, every day is a struggle
you know
they struggle to sleep
because of the sound of the bombs
they struggle to find a clean water
their cues
like my father moved recently
from Gaza City into
Khan Yunus. It took him 22
hours to drive
about 20 kilometers
within a back of a truck
with some of his belongings
or what is still left
of his house and he moved
to almost like halfly destroyed building in Khan Yunus. My father is 76 years old. He was born
in a tent back in 1949 in Khan Yunus because his mother was pregnant when they left Jaffa about
you know, 75 years ago. And now he's lived like a year in a tent and now he lives in a like
have destroyed building. This is just the story of one person reflecting two million people who
have the same situation. Some of them were displaced 10, 15 times. Some of them, they died in the
road reaching Chen Yunus. There's a woman I know. She walked 30 kilometers, and as soon as she
arrived to Khan Yunus, she was taken to the hospital, then to the intensive care unit for
about two or three hours, and she died overnight. So this is just simply the situation in Gaza.
for me I live with guilt all the time
I feel that I was pushed to leave because of my family
I could have stayed more
because it's worth
it's the biggest story I have ever
not only covered but I have ever seen in this place
they were always something happening in Gaza
for the last 25 years
there was five major wars
and few small battles in betweens
I witness many things
the first intifada, the second intifada, the killing of most of the Hamas leaders,
the Yasser Arafat died and I was like there covering this story, the Israeli disengagement.
I never ever expected to cover a story such big like this.
When the 7th of October happened, I realized from the first, you know, 10 minutes, maybe 20 minutes,
just one hour maximum, I realized that this is going to change the way that we have,
we feel about this conflict and it is going to be huge.
I try to push my family to leave Gaza as soon as possible
so I can do my job because it's very hard to be a journalist in Gaza
looking for safety, running for safety every hour
and then covering the story.
And Yoland also, I mean it's difficult to state how great the trauma was for Israel
on October the 7th.
I mean, where would you say public opinion is now
here in Israel regarding the war
because it has divided the world
and it's divided Israel too in some ways?
That's true.
I mean, Israel's a small country
and I would say it's still extremely raw
the grief and the pain from that day two years ago
and, you know, just remember how it was.
It was the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust
and there is now still a widespread feeling
Many Israelis will tell me this, that they believe the world has moved on
and that they have forgotten, to some extent, the atrocities of the 7th of October
that triggered such a brutal war in Gaza.
And Israeli media coverage is very much focused on the plight of the hostages and their families.
There are 48 hostages still being held in Gaza, of whom 20 are believed to be alive.
Evidently, in very bad conditions, we have the testimony of the hostages who,
come back and it's clear that some of those at least some of them who are being held are in
Gaza City and there have been videos from Hamas that have just added to the distress of the families
most of the hostage families you know they have been opposed to the government's new military
offensive expanding the war to try to occupy fully Gaza City they say this will put the remaining
hostages lives in danger and the bodies of hostages that they may never be found
basically. And Jeremy, I mean, one of the big differences I've found covering this war between
Israeli and Palestinian opinion is that Israelis feel that Hamas started this on October the 7th.
Palestinians feel that this goes way back to the creation of the state of Israel in 1947
when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced to flee their homes. The war in 1967.
where Israel captured Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
So for Palestinians, they feel it didn't just start on October the 7th,
and Israelis feel entirely differently.
Yeah, I mean, not all Israelis, clearly,
but there is a deep-rooted conflict here,
an unresolved conflict that doesn't just go back to the independence of Israel in 1948
when they won their independence war
and the Palestinian catastrophe, the Nakhba, as they call it.
The conflict over who controls the land between the River Jordan and the Sea and the Mediterranean Sea started when Zionist Jews came from Europe to Palestine, which in those days was, well, at the very beginning, was still being run by the Turks and then the British.
And so it goes back more than a century.
If you read accounts of, I mean, I recently was reading an account in a memoir by a journalist who was in Jerusalem in the 1920s, the late 20s when there was a lot of violence.
It is extraordinary reading it because it feels a lot like now.
And that is a hundred years ago.
And you can see the similarities and the issues just after.
After the 7th of October attacks, I spoke to, well, he's a writer, but he used to be a politician.
In fact, for a while he was the Speaker of the Israeli Parliament, the Knesset, Avermberg.
And he said to me, I said to him, look, assess the level of trauma for Israelis on this thing.
He said, the Jewish state, as he put it, was our vaccination against our history,
the history in Europe of pogroms leading up to the Holocaust, six million Jews dead in the
Second World War killed by Nazi Germany, and we thought that we had a vaccination against
the past, which was the state. And now we found out this was like three weeks after it started.
He said this to me. He said, we've suddenly realized the vaccination isn't working anymore.
And that, I think, was for him, was the root of this enormous trauma that people were suffering.
And on the other side, on the Palestinian side, you know, on both sides, these ghosts of history were
raised. Rushdie has said that his dad was born in a tent and he found himself in his 70s back
living in a tent. So many Palestinians see what's happening at the moment and they look at the
very inflammatory statements about removing Palestinians, not just from the Gaza Strip, but from
the West Bank by hardline, ultra-nationalist, extremist, Israeli politicians, some of whom are in
the cabinet. And they see a continuation, a desire to finish the job that was done of removing
Palestinians in 1948 when more than 700,000 Palestinians were either fled or were forced out by
military force from their territory, including many who ended up in Gaza, like Rushdie's family,
and were never allowed back. So the past, the ghosts of the past are being raised and are
roaring. And this, I would say, the events in the last two years, they are as big a moment in
the long history of this conflict as 1948 or when Israel was created or 1967 when the current
shape of the conflict was created when Israel captured the totality of the Palestinian territory
by capturing the West Bank, including East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. So, I mean, these are
historic as well as deeply tragic and dreadful times.
And Jeremy, right from the beginning of the conflict, there were fears that it could spread to the wider region, and it did.
Yeah, it did and it has.
There were, right from the start, the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon started a sort of limited, and it became a tip for tat, war across the border into Israel, which had a pretty devastating effect on northern communities.
they had to leave. Then Israel eventually, of course, hit back very hard and caused massive damage to
that organization. The Houthis in Yemen got involved. And there's been a chain of events. The regime
in Syria, the Assad regime fell, and you can connect up the reasons why it fell, not wholly, but partly,
to what was going on in Gaza and in the wider region. Israel has subsequently bombed
with the decisive help of the Americans, the Iranian nuclear facilities, there's a great deal
that is still going on. The whole picture in the region has been transformed by the war.
I think Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel would say that this has been Israel's strength
and resolve, has transformed the strategic situation decisively in their favor.
the contrary opinion to that is that, yes, Israel has secured a series of victories by using its
extraordinary military forces backed by the Americans and in not just militarily, but diplomatically,
politically and so on, but longer term, living by the sword in a region that really would be a lot
better off if it was at peace. Netanyahu had made a speech a week or two ago where he compared
Israel to sparta in ancient Greeks, self-reliance, strong, quite happy to continue battling its
neighbours if necessary to secure its own people. And frankly, that speech didn't go down very
well in Israel because it's a country which has had a lot of links with elsewhere in the
world. And what they're seeing now, the Israelis, are increased pressure from the outside world,
from allies in Europe, a Palestinian state being recognized by Britain, France, and numbers of
other Western countries, which up to now haven't done it. The Israeli Prime Minister and former
defence minister have had arrest warrants against them issued by the International Criminal Court.
There is a genocide case against Israel going on in the International Court of Justice.
There's even talk about suspending Israel from sporting activities, from UEFA, from the European
football authorities, from the World Cup qualifiers. There are all kinds of ramifications going on.
And of course, at the same time as all of that,
there is this massive humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.
More than 65,000 people.
Mostly civilians have been killed, and that is continuing.
Those figures are from what we refer to as the Hamas-run health ministry,
but whose figures are normally relied upon by international organization
as being the best around.
And actually, some studies, including in the Lancet in London,
in the medical journal, have said that they're a big underestimate of what's been going on there.
We've seen the destruction of the Gaza Strip pretty much, much of it in ruins and now, and a famine.
So, I mean, you name it, terrible things are happening and continue to happen at the moment two years on.
Okay, I'm going to bring in some questions now from our listeners.
The first one from Sadiq in Mumbai, in India, and it's a question about language.
and I think it's fair to say we all have to choose our language pretty carefully when choosing this conflict.
He says, why does the BBC still not refer to the war in Gaza as a genocide
after experts have already labelled it as such?
Another classic comment we get is why doesn't the BBC refer to Hamas as terrorists?
And it's your lucky day, Yoland, because I'm going to throw this one to you.
We stand on this balcony all the time.
I stand here and I use all those words,
genocide, I use the word terrorist, and I use them with attribution, whether I'm talking about
the Israeli military or Hamas or a UN Commission of Inquiry report or the British government.
And that's because the BBC has these editorial policies that we as correspondents, we can comment on those,
we can help to shape those. But in the end, we all agree to adhere to those.
And that's really with the objective to make sure that our journalism is as important.
It's as accurate as it possibly can be.
And, you know, the guidelines are supposed to be for our coverage all around the world where we're catering for a diversity of audiences, right?
So the guiding principle that we have is to use descriptive terms to, for example, describe those who are carrying out violence.
So that might be using the word attacker or gunman or bombers, whatever that might be.
and then we try to explain the facts of what has occurred
and what the consequences are
and the idea is that that should be meaningful
to our audiences wherever they are
and they can make their own value judgments
and if you look at some particular words that's like you know terrorism
that is the BBC argument there has been
that there is no internationally agreed definition of terrorism I suppose
and that's why we choose attribution
and we're not taking a political side in conflict.
This is a conflict, as Jeremy's been saying,
it's so deep-rooted, it's so complex,
and extremely sensitive, as we all know very well.
A question which I think is going to be for you, Rushdie.
This comes from Oren in Israel.
He's sent it in in a voice note, and we can hear it now.
How many Palestinians are in favor of Hamas today?
If there was an election, would Hamas win?
Is there any difference between West Bank and Gaza's script in terms of opinions?
Yes, definitely there is different between West Bank and Gaza.
I have been to the West Bank many, many times, and the people there,
he do support Hamas.
Many of the people that I met, especially in the places like the South, like in Hebrew,
some of the areas like Janine and other places,
there's a great support for Hamas and Islamic Jihad in those.
especially two areas, like the refugee camps.
And it's partially because they believe that the Palestinian Authority and Fatah are corrupt,
and they want some alternative.
And this is exactly what happened in Gaza back in 2006,
when we believe that not all of the people who voted for Hamas were Hamas people or in favor of Hamas,
but it wasn't the other side trying to punish PA and Fatah for a long-standing corruption existing.
in Gaza.
Now, I think by
watching the
monitoring the social media
and what is people talking about
Hamas and 7th of October
especially there is
a great division within the people
in Gaza and I could say
freely that very little
people in Gaza
who still support Hamas in
public, maybe because their fear
of an Israeli reaction
or also because
the people of Gaza
paid a very big
price and from the first
moment of 7th of October
in the first month
there was many huge number
of people in Gaza who were equally
accused Hamas of
the consequences of the aftermath
of the Israeli attack because some
of them were saying that Hamas
did have this jump
in the air without
you know strengthen their packing
there was no preparation
at all in Gaza. They were only
preparing tunnels to hide their
militants. That's what the people in Gaza
are saying. There was no enough food.
There was no health,
a strong health system to deal
with the catastrophe that Gaza
is facing. There was no
food reserved or water or electricity
or anything. They just left the
people to live
this catastrophe without
intervening. We'll do anything.
So people do publicly criticize
Hamas for this and there is
a huge division. But there is two big
when the people inside Gaza who live this
and the people outside who are watching the bigger picture
because regardless of who support Hamas
or October the 7th or who not support this
the issue of the Palestinian causes became a trend
I mean I've been traveling around the region for the last two years
you can see that the Palestinian for example Kofiyals became a trend
this traditional scarf that people are wearing
It's everywhere.
You can see Palestinian flag everywhere.
This picture, the people inside Gaza, they do not see
because they don't have electricity, they don't have internet,
and they don't care sometimes about what's going on outside.
So for someone who's living outside who can see the bigger picture,
I can see that there is a huge division between Palestinians
and regarding to Hamas.
And a question for you, Jeremy, from Dan in Washington State in the USA.
heard a lot of talk actually in the last few weeks about the two-state solution, a Palestinian state
alongside Israel. He's asking Dan, what are the prospects of a one-state solution where there is one
secular democracy between the river and the sea? The two-state solution has been talked about
for decades and there's been little progress in reaching one. Yeah, there has been little progress
and I was living in Jerusalem in the 1990s when the Oslo peace process was going on and there was
then genuine hope on both sides. There are also people who are heavily critical of it, very, very
violently critical in some cases of it. There was a mass bombing campaign to try and stop it.
And of course, the Israeli Prime Minister was assassinated by a Jewish extremist who was against
the ideas of two-state solution. But anyway, after all that collapsed, it became really an empty
slogan, the idea of it. And now countries like Britain, French, are trying to, and the Saudis,
to breathe some life into the idea. We'll see whether or not that actually results in
anything. As for a one-state solution, there may be a de facto one state insofar as if Israel
continues in its occupation or maybe annexes part of the West Bank, because now it really
controls the entire area, then eventually that would be one state, but then there would be
this huge question of do you give the Palestinian population, which is roughly, if you
take the 20% of the Israeli population that is Palestinian. Half the number of people between the
river and the sea are Palestinians. So this has been, Israelis have been well aware of this for a long
time, which is if you don't have a Palestinian state, what do you have? They want Israel to be
in control. They want it to be a Jewish state. But if you then had a democracy, with half the
population not being Jews, being Palestinians, well, then they might see oblivion down that road.
So I think the chances of a one-state solution that is a full democracy are vanishingly, unlikely.
And I think at the moment, a two-state solution is also highly unlikely.
The Israeli governments against it.
The Americans are against it for now.
So what are we talking about?
I think we're talking about unless there is some kind of diplomatic miracle, they're continuing
conflict, a continuing occupation, and another generation drawn into it.
We're running out of time, so this is going to be my last question.
It's to you again, Jeremy.
I mean, that was quite a depressing answer.
Where's this heading?
Are there any grounds for optimism at all?
Well, as we speak, there's a new flurry around a ceasefire in Gaza.
I mean, let's hope there is ceasefire, hostages go home, families are able to agree.
and to welcome back the living.
Let's hope that the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza for Palestinians
is ceases, that aid gets in.
But what about politically?
Once after that, I hate to be the guy who's always depressing,
but I don't see where the political horizon is.
I don't see where it's going other at the moment
than other kinds of conflict,
the radicalization of a generation,
not just Palestinians, but also on the Israeli side.
Israeli soldiers, young guys have said to me,
never mind radicalizing the Palestinians.
They radicalized us.
October the 7th, radicalized us.
So I really hate to be the bringer of bad tidings.
But having reported on this for many, many years,
I have not seen a worse time in terms of the prospects
for a decent future for people.
What gives a lot of the potency of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is that it exports trouble, exports a toxicity, has political impacts elsewhere, has violence is generated elsewhere because of it, well out of the Middle East.
And unless things get better, unless there are possibly different leaders who have different attitudes on both sides, on all sides, then, I mean, I don't see it getting better.
I don't, I'm sorry about to say that.
It's a very sobering way to end,
but I want to thank our guests on the program today.
Yolánel, Jeremy Bowen, in London,
and also Rushdie Abu aloof,
our Gaza correspondent, who now is based in Istanbul.
You've been listening to a special edition
of the Global News podcast with me, John Donison.
If you want to comment on it,
you can send us an email.
The address is Global Podcast at BBC.
you can also find us on x that is at bbc world service and you can use the hashtag global news pod this
edition was mixed and produced by isabella jewel and filmed for youtube by anastasia slato
boltskaya the editor is karen martin i'm john donison and until the next time bye
