September 2, 2015

Gaza could become uninhabitable in less than five years: UN report

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at http://ift.tt/jcXqJW.



Wednesday 02 Sep 2015 - 13:10 Makkah mean time-18-11-1436

(Image from UNCTAD)

Jerusalem, (IINA) - A new UN report warned that the Gaza Strip could become “uninhabitable” by 2020 if the current economic trends persist, UN News Center reported. The report was published on Tuesday by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) on assistance to the Palestinian people.
In addition to eight years of economic blockade, over the past six years, Gaza has endured three Israeli military operations that have shattered its ability to export and produce for the domestic market, ravaged its already debilitated infrastructure, and left no time for reconstruction and economic recovery.
According to UNCTAD, Israeli aggression has accelerated the “de-development” of the occupied Palestinian territory, a process by which development is not merely hindered but reversed.
The report highlights the severe crises in Gaza Strip related to water and electricity, as well as the destruction of vital infrastructure during the military aggression in July and August 2014. For example, it finds that 1.8 million inhabitants rely on coastal aquifers as their main source of freshwater, yet 95 percent of this water is not safe to drink.
In addition to the 500,000 people who have been displaced in Gaza as a result of the most recent military aggression, the report estimated significant economic losses, the estimation includes the destruction or severe damage of more than 20,000 Palestinian homes, 148 schools and 15 hospitals as well as damages inflicted on Gaza’s sole power plant.
The UN estimated that in 2014, unemployment in Gaza reached 44 percent, the highest level on record. UNCTAD described the economic well-being of Palestinians living in Gaza as being worse today than two decades ago.
In fact, the report showed that with negative economic growth of minus 0.4 percent last year, the economy of the occupied Palestinian territory witnessed its first recession since 2006 and a fall in income per capita for the second year in a row. The deteriorating situation is reportedly due almost entirely to a range of “discriminatory” economic policies imposed on it.
These include Israel withholding almost $700 million of Palestinian clearance revenue, which comes from taxes on imports into the occupied Palestinian territory, compounding a fiscal crisis for the Palestinian National Authority, on whose behalf Israel collects the revenues.
Finally, UNCTAD stressed that donor support remains a necessary but insufficient condition for Gaza’s recovery and reconstruction. Short of ending the blockade, it said donor aid will remain vitally important but will not reverse the ongoing de-development and impoverishment in Gaza.
AG/IINA

No comments:

Post a Comment