About half of the buildings
demolished during Israel’s deadly 2014 onslaught on the blockaded Gaza
Strip are still awaiting reconstruction, a campaign group says.
In
a statement released on Saturday, Jamal al-Khudari, head of the Popular
Committee Against Siege, said rebuilding Gaza has been hampered by
severe restrictions on the entry of materials due to the devastating
Israeli siege on the coastal enclave.
Some donor countries have
failed to fulfill their pledges to contribute to the Gaza
reconstruction, Khudari noted, calling on those states to meet their
commitments and help end the “disastrous and tragic” situation in Gaza.
Israel
has waged three wars on Gaza since 2008, including the 2014 offensive,
which left more than 2,200 Palestinians dead and over 11,100 others
injured.
The latest aggression against Gaza started in early July
2014 and ended after 50 days on August 26 that year, with a truce that
took effect after indirect negotiations in the Egyptian capital, Cairo. Elsewhere in his remarks,
Khudari urged Norway and Egypt, among supporters of the Gaza truce, as
well as the rest of the international community to pressure the Tel Aviv
regime to lift its siege on Gaza.
“The owners of
thousands of destroyed houses are still living under exceptional
circumstances and extreme suffering. Some are living in caravans and
some in rented apartments away from their families, with no stability,”
he said.
Back in March, the World Bank said only
$1.409 billion, some 40 percent of the total pledged aid for the Gaza
reconstruction, has been received while donor countries are yet to
deliver the remaining $3.507 billion.
A survey by the Office of
the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in April also
found that up to 75,000 Palestinians remained homeless in the blockaded
coastal sliver while many families were living in shelter condition.
Over
80 percent of the families in Gaza had borrowed money over the past
year to survive, with 85 percent buying food on credit, and as many as
40 percent decreasing their consumption of food, the survey further
said.
The Gaza Strip has been under an Israeli siege since June
2007. The blockade has caused a decline in living standards as well as
unprecedented levels of unemployment and unrelenting poverty.
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