They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance                 U.S                 Afghanistan                 Iran                 International                                
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Gaza
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
2025/11/12-20:21

They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Joud Ahmad Al-Angar (right) and his 12-year-old cousin Zain Nour recuperate from injuries after they found a bucket of pellets and brought it home, thinking it could help their family. The bucket detonated.

"The other boys told me they were buckets of lentils," recalls 8-year-old Joud Ahmad Al Angar. He`s talking about the container of small black pellets he and his cousins found in the rubble near their tent in Gaza City.

His 12-year-old cousin Zain Nour thought the pellets looked like chunks of coal. Perhaps they could help start a fire so that their parents could cook dinner. Whatever it was, the boys reasoned, maybe it could help their families in some way.

"When we brought it back to the tent," says Zain, "the adults said, `Go return that to where you found it,` so my cousin tossed it, and then it exploded."

Phone video captured immediately after the explosion and shared with NPR by a family member shows Zain and Joud staggering from the scene of the blast, both of them screaming and covered in blood. Zain`s father Mohammad Nour was the first on the scene.

embed

"The kids went flying through the air," he remembers. "We found each of them in a different place. I found my son hanging on a fence, bleeding. Both of them had shrapnel lodged in their bodies. And they were covered in dust. My son was crying for me."

Two days later, Zain and Joud share a bed in a room crowded with other patients in Gaza City`s Al-Shifa Hospital. Their hair is covered in dust and their bodies are blackened by the blast. Dime-sized scabs from the black pellet shrapnel cover their little bodies. The larger reddish wounds ooze white pus. Joud`s scalp was ripped open and sewed shut with rudimentary stitches.

"When we arrived to the hospital, it was out of painkillers and there weren`t many doctors to help us," says Mohammad Nour. "Finally we found some medicine and were able to clean their wounds, but because there aren`t any surgeons left in northern Gaza, we`re waiting for operations to remove the rest of the shrapnel from their bodies."

The undetonated explosives his son and nephew found, says Nour, are "all over the place here in Gaza. We`ve lost our home and we`re afraid to move from one place to another because they`re everywhere. The rubble is full of them and they`re often exploding."

The United Nations Mine Action Service estimates between 5% and 10% of Israeli weapons fired into Gaza in the past two years have failed to detonate, leaving behind unexploded ordnance that has killed at least 328 people - 24 since the current ceasefire began on Oct. 10.

"We receive daily calls from citizens reporting unexploded bombs," says Mahmoud Basal, spokesperson of Civil Defense in Gaza. "They`re in buildings, under buildings, on roofs, and on the roads, and these include enormous war missiles, missiles from drones, bombs, the list goes on."

Basal estimates there are tens of thousands of tons of unexploded bombs littered throughout Gaza from the two-year war.

"The problem is," he says, "90% of my colleagues who were capable of defusing these bombs have been killed in Israeli attacks."

That leaves specialists like Nick Orr to locate Gaza`s unexploded ordnance. He`s chief of operations for the nonprofit Humanity and Inclusion in Gaza.

Orr says his job is not going to be easy in such a densely populated place like Gaza, where he will need to cordon off a safety zone and evacuate people each time a bomb is found. "We can`t hold a cordon or create an evacuation eclipse inside of Gaza," he says, exasperated. "There`s 2.4 million people. I would need an 800-meter cordon in Gaza City. Can you imagine how that could be achieved right now with all the will in the world? It`s impossible."

Postwar Gaza finds itself in a scenario that the world has not seen for decades, he says. "It`s biblical," he says. "And if you look at World War II photographs of Berlin and Paris and London, it`s exactly the same thing."

As it happens, construction crews in heavily bombed cities in World War II like Berlin still regularly find unexploded ordnance 80 years later. Orr believes it will take a similar chunk of time to clear Gaza.

"You could probably clear the surface in 20 or 30 years, but you`re still going to be finding things on the ground for two to three generations - and probably in the fossil record - with an amount of contamination that`s down there now," he says.

Orr says before he and his team can begin to safely clear these bombs from Gaza, there needs to be some kind of internal security force to help move people out of their homes so that the work can be done. But at the moment there is no such force. President Trump`s peace plan includes the formation of an international stabilization force, but that could be months in the making.

"And then I think it`s going to be like a patchwork quilt where we will geographically move to an area, we will serve an evacuation notice, tell the people and then we give them the responsibility to move," Orr says. "But we also have got to give them somewhere to move to."

And that, says Orr, will mean more internally displaced persons` camps that Gazans are already all too familiar with from two years of bombardment.

A high-ranking official in the unexploded ordnance division of Gaza`s interior ministry who is not authorized to speak publicly told NPR that under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire plan, unexploded bombs are being treated as part of the disarmament of Hamas because Hamas often recycles these bombs to be used against Israel. As such, this official said, Israel`s military is targeting any Gaza civilians who try to handle Gaza`s unexploded bombs.

The official told NPR that Israel and Hamas have agreed to allow Egyptian teams to manage the cleanup of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance. When asked to confirm this with NPR, a spokesperson for Israel`s military responded by text message with "no comment."

Back at Gaza City`s Al-Shifa hospital, Zain Nour and his cousin Joud Ahmad Al Angar say they`ll think twice before scavenging again amongst the rubble of Gaza for food and other useful items for their families. It`s an activity that has become commonplace in Gaza, where more than 64,000 children have either been killed or injured in the past two years, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

The boys say they`ve learned their lesson.

"We are now too scared to go poking around near bombed-out buildings," says Joud, his face full of scabs and stitches. "Next time," he says, "we will stay far, far away."

 

 

 

#Gaza                 # Israel                 # Palestine                 # Hamas                # Donald Trump                # Gaza War                # Sharm el-Sheikh Summit               
Readers comments
You are the first person to comment on this article. Comments are displayed after verification.
Enter the characters shown in the field below.
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Russia Ukraine War
Russia targets Ukraine with massive drone and missile attack amid diplomatic talks
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
South Africa
Mass shooting leaves at least 11 killed including 3 children in South Africa
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
London
Tower of London closed after `custard and apple crumble` thrown over case containing U.K. Crown Jewels
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Israel
Israel’s genocide leaves over 21,000 Palestinian children ‘disabled or amputated’
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Israel
Three more Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes on northern Gaza despite ceasefire
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Europe
Trump Administration Warns About Europe Becoming Less White
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
football
Trump’s ‘Peace Prize’ moment at World Cup draw sparks worldwide cringe
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Russia
Iran, Russia sign agreement to boost AI, cyber security cooperation
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Germany
German lawmakers approve voluntary military service plan that stops short of conscription
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Donald Trump
Congo fighting flares within hours of Trump`s peace deal ceremony
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Israel
Ireland, Spain and Netherlands quit Eurovision Song Contest after Israel was allowed to stay in competition
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
cyber
Putin challenges US pressure on India over Russian oil during state visit
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Europe
Ex-top EU diplomat quits college post over fraud charge
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Norway
U.K. and Norway sign pact to "hunt Russian submarines" in North Atlantic
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Ukraine
Putin says there are points he can`t agree to in the U.S. proposal to end Russia`s war in Ukraine
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Israel
Israeli collaborator Yasser Abu Shabab reportedly killed in Gaza
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Israel
‘Fundamentally wrong’: Guterres slams Israel for ‘total neglect’ of civilian deaths, destruction in Gaza
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Ansar Press; Free and independent with impartial reports from the world at the service of the people
U.S
Afghanistan
Iran
International
Social
Economic
Articles
Athletic
Read
Science
Medical
Interview
Art and Culture
Travel
About Us
Contact Us
Advertise with Us
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance
Ansar Press; Free and independent with impartial reports from the world at the service of the people
Privacy Policy            Terms of Use
External links provided for reference purposes. Ansar Press is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. @ 2025 Ansar Press
They found a `bucket of lentils.` Then it blew up. The menace of Gaza`s unexploded ordnance