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One Year after War “Gaza Is Still in Crisis, with Civilians Paying the Highest Price”

Wednesday, July 8, 2015 2:28
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(Before It's News)

Human Wrongs Watch

One year after the escalation of hostilities in Gaza, the United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, Robert Piper, on 7 July 2015 expressed concern over the ongoing humanitarian situation and the slow pace of reconstruction there.

A rubble removal project at Shujaiyah, Gaza, is funded by Sweden and implemented by UNDP. Photo: UNDP

 Piper said following a meeting of humanitarian organizations held in yesterday [6 July] Gaza city.*

The 51-day conflict killed 1,462 civilians, including 551 children, and injured many thousands across Gaza. Six Israeli civilians (including one child) were also victims of the hostilities.

It caused close to $1.4 billion in direct and indirect damages and $1.7 billion in economic losses to Gaza, points out a press release from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

Since then, continued Pipet, humanitarian organizations have supported close to 90,000 families with temporary shelter, food assistance has been provided to over 1.4 million people and some 85,000 children have received psychosocial support. Considerable work has already taken place to remove rubble and unexploded ordnance.

At the Cairo Gaza Reconstruction Conference last October, donors pledged some $3.5 billion in support of recovery efforts. A dedicated mechanism was created by Palestine, Israel and the UN to facilitate the entry of construction material.

Within the last month, a new stage of reconstruction has begun, which will allow for the 12,600 totally destroyed homes to be rebuilt and new housing to be built.

Despite all these continuing efforts, he said that today, some 100,000 people remain internally displaced, hosted in temporary accommodation or in make-shift shelters. Close to a 120,000 people are still waiting to be reconnected to the city water supply.

Homes damaged in Gaza during the devastating conflict in 2014. UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe

Homes damaged in Gaza during the devastating conflict in 2014. UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe

Work has yet to begin on a number of key health facilities. The humanitarian appeal for Gaza remains 70 per cent underfunded, while the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is facing an unprecedented funding crisis in its General Fund.

“Our ability to move from short-term relief to longer-term reconstruction is constrained by a major shortfall in humanitarian funding. Nine months after the Cairo Reconstruction Conference, Gaza’s recovery process needs to be accelerated,” warned Piper.

In order to accelerate the recovery process, the Humanitarian Country Team calls on international donors to ensure that commitments made in Cairo quickly translate into concrete funding on the ground, as only 28 per cent of pledges have been disbursed to date.

In addition, it calls on Israel to review its list of ‘dual use’ items for which entry into Gaza is restricted, particularly those items required for urgent medical care. Israeli and Palestinian authorities need to cooperate in addressing Gaza’s acute water and energy crisis.

The team also appeals to the Palestinian government to strengthen the management and oversight of the reconstruction process and to Israel to allow for a significant increase in the movement of people and construction material in and out of Gaza.

According to the World Bank, Gaza currently has the highest unemployment rate in the world, at 43 per cent. Food insecurity affects 73 per cent of the population.

An estimated 80 per cent of the population relies on humanitarian aid, mainly food assistance.

Electricity is available only eight to 12 hours a day, also affecting water supply which covers a fraction of daily needs.

Up to 90 million liters of partially-treated sewage are being discharged into the Mediterranean Sea every day, partially due to electricity and fuel shortages. Finally, maternal mortality rates are estimated to have nearly doubled in the last 12 months.

“Simply restoring households to pre-war levels of vulnerability is not enough,” stated Piper. “Palestinians in Gaza need to be lifted out of this self-perpetuating cycle of crisis.” (Source: UN).

Read also:

The 2014 War on Gaza – ‘Not A Single Home Has Been Rebuilt’

Anniversary of Sorrow Marked with Gaza’s Largest Mass wedding

Unemployment Rate for Palestine Refugees Reaches 44 per cent in Gaza

‘It Could Take Over 100 Years to Complete Essential Building of Homes, Schools and health Facilities in Gaza’

Gaza Children Trapped in Trauma

‘UN predictions fall short: Gaza uninhabitable today’

‘Clock Is Ticking’ for War-Ravaged Gaza; Promises on Rebuilding Must ‘Quickly Materialize’

Wars on Gaza: Over 100,000 Homes Damaged, Destroyed; 600,000 People Affected; Blackouts of up to 18 Hours per Day

Loss amid the Rubble in Gaza

Not a Single Child Untouched by Recent Gaza Conflict — UN Human Rights Expert

What’s in the UN New Gaza Agreement?

2015 Human Wrongs Watch



Source: http://human-wrongs-watch.net/2015/07/08/one-year-after-war-gaza-is-still-in-crisis-with-civilians-paying-the-highest-price/

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