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Special correspondent
We flew through the warm light of the setting sun. There were villages and small towns where the lights lit up. It was a calm landscape where people went and drove without constantly looking at the sky.
We were over the suburbs of Aman when Safa Salha picked up her mobile phone so I could read a message she wrote.
“Oh my God,” wrote this mother Gaza, “Jordan is so beautiful.”
The evacuators had reached the Jordan border along the way. I joined them there for the last part of a helicopter trip to Aman.
Safa’a spoke very little English and in any case the noise of the helicopter made it impossible to talk.
She showed me another message. “We saw this (a helicopter) every day and came to bomb and kill. But today the feeling is completely different.”
Next to her was his 16-year-old son Youssef, who showed me the scar on his head from his last operation. He smiled and wanted to speak, not of gas, but of ordinary things. How he was excited by the helicopter, how he liked football. Youssef said he was very happy and gave me a fist.
Next to him was Avad alone, fragile and frightened, holding her mother’s hand. She has a brain tumor herself and will have surgery in Aman.
“I hope she can get the best treatment here,” Isra said when we were on the ground and the noise of the engines faded.
I asked a question that they answered many times, looking at images, but not face to face from someone who had just left.
What is gas now?
“It’s awful. It’s impossible to describe. Terrible at so many levels. But people are just trying to continue to live,” Is Is Is.

Four sick children were evacuated to Jordan with twelve parents and guardians. They left a gas with an ambulance on Wednesday morning and traveled through Israel without stopping until they reached the border point.
The children’s evacuation plan was first discovered during a meeting between US President Donald Trump and King of Jordan in February.
Jordan’s requested goal is to bring 2000 sick children to the kingdom for treatment. So far, only 33 have been evacuated to Jordan, each traveling with a parent or guardian.
The Jordanian sources claim that Israel has delayed and imposed restrictions and this – along with the resumption of war – impedes the evacuation process. Gazani patients are also evacuated to other countries through Israel.
We put Jordan’s fears about a responsible state organization of the Israeli organization – COGAT (Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories) – which told us that since the beginning of the year, and especially in recent weeks, there has been a significant increase in the number of gas evacuated through Israel for medical care abroad. “
When he said thousands of patients and companions went to countries, including Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, the US and others. The statement states that “Continuing hostilities in the Gaza tape are a challenge to perform these evacuation operations.”
Israel violated the last ceasefire in March, launching a wave of attacks against what they said were Hamas’s position.
Gaza remains a claustrophobic zone of hunger and death for its inhabitants. Those who get out of medical treatment are an exception.
According to the UN, a population of 2.1 million is at the risk of starvation. The head of the humanitarian issues of the organization Tom Fletcher appealed to the UN Security Council to act to “prevent genocide” in Gaza.
These are strong words for a person trained in the sober traditions of the British outsiders of the outsiders and who served as an ambassador and senior government advisor.
The Israeli blockade prevents the main supplies for help from reaching. This, along with the ongoing bombing, explain Is Is Is Abu Jame’s description of a place, terribly beyond words.
The children who arrived in Jordan on Wednesday from Gaza will join a small community of other wounded and sick young people in various hospitals in Amman.
Since January, we have been following the case of Habiba Al -Askari, who came with his mother wound in Hope, which doctors can save three infected gangre limbs – two hands and leg.
But the infection – caused by a rare condition of the skin – had gone too far. Habiba suffered a triple amputation.

When I met Habiba and wound this week, the girl used the toes of her remaining leg to scroll and play children’s games on her mother’s phone. She blew up kisses with the stump on her hand. It was a very different child of the frightened girl I met at the helicopter’s evacuation five months ago.
“She’s a strong man,” Rana said. Habiba will be provided with prosthetic limbs. She is already determined to walk, asking her mother to hold under her arms as she jumps.
One day, she hopes a wound, she will bring Habiba back to Gaza. The mother and the child are safe and well cared for in Aman, but their whole world, family and neighbors are again in the ruins. Concerns about Habiba’s health make a wound not tend to consider returning soon.
“We don’t have a house. If we want to go back where we will go? We will go back to a tent full of sand … (but) I really want to come back. Gaza is beautiful, despite everything that happened. Gaza will always be the most valuable place on all this earth.”
They will return. But to war or peace? Nobody knows.
With additional reporting from Alice, Komdard, Dry Kavar, Nickh Millard and Federal Federal.