Words
fail me
UN
suspends food and cash distribution, leaving Gaza destitute
The
UN has suspended operation of all of its food distribution outlets in
Gaza following protesters storming one of them. The centers will
resume operation when the UN Relief and Works Agency gets safety
confirmation for its property and staff.
RT,
5
April, 2013
On Thursday dozens of men
stormed one of UNRWA’s distribution centers in protest against the
UN suspending direct financial assistance to thousands of poor
Palestinian families in Gaza starting from April 1. The cash aid was
halted due to significant budget cuts of UNRWA, which already caused
a US$67-million-plus deficit in the organization’s budget.
In return, UNRWA
announced temporary closure of their field food distribution centers
due to "a dramatic and disturbing escalation in a series
of demonstrations that have taken place over the past week,"UNRWA
said in its statement.
The UNRWA’s chief in
Gaza has been categorical.
"What happened
today was completely unacceptable,” acknowledged in the
statement Robert Turner, head of the agency's Gaza operations.
Now Palestinians in Gaza
are not likely to get any help at all as the UNRWA has been
supporting nearly a half, 800,000 Palestinians out of a total 1.7
million population in Gaza. The UNRWA also still runs several dozens
of schools and medical clinics in Gaza.
It is also worth noting
that the UNRWA has been feeding 25,000 people in Gaza on a daily
basis.
Palestinians
collect food supplies from the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency (UNRWA) headquarters in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip (AFP
Photo/Said Khatib)
With the distinct
prospect of a humanitarian catastrophe on the horizon, the
Palestinian Hamas group, which has been in charge in Gaza since 2007
and is supposed to keep order and security on the territory of the
Strip, has voiced its concerns, calling the closure of food centers
“unjustified”.
Answering the UNRWA’s
accusations of an “apparently pre-planned, unwarranted and
unprecedented” attack, a spokesman for Hamas in Gaza, Sami Abu
Zuhri, pointed out that the Hamas militia had arrived at the scene of
the assault on the UNRWA compound after a phone call and ended the
riot immediately.
“We are asking the
UNRWA to rethink their decision," Abu Zuhri said.
“We fully understand
the impact the decision to suspend cash assistance had on some of our
beneficiaries,” Turner declared.
Palestinians
go through a pile of garbage in search of recyclable material in
Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on April 3, 2013. (AFP Photo/Said
Khatib)
Israel is currently
conducting occasional airstrikes against Hamas activists in
retaliation for launches of
homemade rockets in the direction of Israel.
The border with Egypt
also remains securely closed after the incident on August 5 last
year, when a group of Islamist militants attacked
an Egyptian checkpoint along
the border with Israel on Sinai Peninsula, killing 16 soldiers. Later
on the militants were eliminated by the IDF while trying to force
their way deep into Israeli territory.
Cairo wants no more
problems on the border with Israel, so they re-opened only one
crossing, Rafah, on the Egypt-Gaza border that connects 1.7 million
people with the outside word. The Egyptian army has also begun
sealing some of the 1,200 illegal tunnels that currently permeate the
Egyptian border with the Gaza Strip.
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