Michigan couple trapped in Gaza sue U.S. government over lack of evacuation efforts

Michigan couple trapped in Gaza sue U.S. government over lack of evacuation efforts

A Michigan couple stuck in Gaza have sued U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin in hopes that American citizens like themselves are safely evacuated and brought back to the states, according to a lawsuit filed last week.

Zakaria Alarayshi and Laila Alarayshi have been stuck in Palestine ever since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing approximately 1,400 people and taking around 200 hostages. As of this writing, at least 5,100 Palestinians have been killed since the conflict began.

The Alaryashis left their home in Dearborn to visit family in Gaza for a couple of weeks, arriving on Oct. 5.

Now, they’re pleading with President Joe Biden for help to evacuate.

“He has to get me out from here,” Zakaria, 62, said in a video message posted on Facebook three days ago. “Life here is so bad. I can’t handle it here.”

Zakaria said that he has not been able to shower in 12 days and he and his family have been forced to drink salt water. Food is scarce, he continued. The house next to the one he’s residing in was recently bombed.

The day before filing their lawsuit, the couple tried to leave Palestine through the Egyptian border but were turned away by Egyptian authorities. On Oct. 21, the border between Egypt and Gaza opened briefly to allow about 20 trucks into Gaza carrying aid.

It has been closed since.

The lawsuit was filed in conjunction with the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee and Arab-American Civil Rights League in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.

It alleges that not evacuating American citizens trapped in Gaza is a violation of their constitutional rights — specifically, a denial of equal protection, which is guaranteed under the 14th amendment.

Both organizations also filed a preliminary injunction seeking to have the court order the immediate evacuation of the couple as well as other Americans stuck in Gaza.

“Their lives are in grave danger from ongoing military action and violence in which they are non-combatants,” the lawsuit states.

Making matters increasingly difficult, the organizations involved said that State Department officials told them that the U.S. would not “engage in evacuation efforts, procedures and or processes to safely evacuate U.S. citizens in Gaza.”

On Oct. 14, the State Department issued a travel warning advising U.S. citizens and residents against traveling to the area.

The U.S. has a history of evacuating citizens from countries or territories at war, including instances of offering flights out of countries like Vietnam, Lebanon, Iran and Bosnia, according to the lawsuit.

Within the last week, authorities began evacuating Americans in Israel. As of Oct. 17, over 270 Americans had left the country.

As the war between Israel and Hamas escalates, Zakaria said he’s concerned that he and his family “are going to die before we leave.”

“We can’t go to the bathroom. We can’t go anywhere,” he said in a statement. “We are scared.”