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Israel/ Palestine

How many times must Gaza be rebuilt, to be bombed again?

Middle East Monitor 09/11/2022

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By Anjuman Rahman | –

( Middle East Monitor ) – Israel is infamous for bombing innocents in the Gaza Strip. During Israel’s latest three-day military offensive against the besieged enclave on 5 August, 49 people, including 17 children and four women were killed.

Israeli air and artillery strikes also struck various targets across Gaza that it claimed belonged to Islamic Jihad, destroying refugee camps and more than 1,500 housing units, displacing approximately 450 Palestinians from homes that were completely damaged.

Dubbed “Operation Breaking Dawn”, Qatar Red Crescent Society has since launched a “Devotion to Gaza” campaign to collect $2.7m to help rebuild the homes destroyed.

The bloody onslaught on Gaza followed only a year after the 11-day Israeli attack in May 2021, during which civilians were killed and injured, tens of thousands displaced, homes and vital infrastructure destroyed and the supply of basic services severely disrupted.

Health Centres and media offices, as well as schools and mosques, were among structures that were targeted. Wheat farms were scorched.


No human rights in Gaza – Cartoon [Sabaaneh/MiddleEastMonitor]

As a result, most people took temporary shelter in schools, or with friends and family, before eventually going back home. However, some 1,800 families – around 10,000 people – remain unable to return.

After the bombing stopped, the Palestinian Ministry of Housing in Gaza announced that it suffered $479 million worth of damages and that the losses were suffered in the housing, infrastructure, development and economic sectors.

Promises of assistance to “rebuild homes and roads” and “support Gaza civilians” poured in, much of it directly to UNRWA, the UN’s Agency for Palestine refugees.

Adnan Abu Hasna, UNRWA’s spokesperson in Gaza, said the Agency received $60m from donors to fix and rebuild homes. Notably, Egypt and Qatar pledged $500m each, for reconstruction.

Moreover, Malaysia launched a “unified” fund to support Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip.

And, although Israel did agree to remove restrictions on the entry of building materials into Gaza last August, officials in Gaza argue that Israel continues to pressure donors to not fund reconstruction projects.

The $479 million damage came after the 2020 UN report, which revealed that the blockade has pushed more than one million Palestinians in Gaza below the poverty line and cost the enclave $16.9bn.

The UN report came in addition to Gaza’s Ministry of Social Development’s announcement in 2019 that the rates of poverty and unemployment in the Strip reached nearly 75 per cent due to Israel’s two-day onslaught against Gaza in November, code-named “Operation Black Belt”.

Israeli officials boasted about their “great victory” over “terror” in the Gaza Strip, which caused the death of 34 Palestinians, including eight children and three women, and wounded 111 others.

Prior to Israel’s “Operation Black Belt” on Gaza, the Palestinian Housing Minister announced in February 2019, that 90 per cent of the houses destroyed by Israel during the 2014 military offensive against Gaza had been rebuilt from the millions poured in towards projects helping reconstruct Palestinian homes.

However, Gaza’s Ministry of Social Development added in its press release that, since Israel’s “Operation Black Belt” on Gaza, 70 per cent of the population is food insecure. This, it continued, was a result of “the aggressive Israeli practices increased since the Second Intifada, which broke out in 2000, and depriving thousands of Palestinians of their jobs”.

As a result, the Palestinian economy could not “create new jobs to accommodate those untrained workers”.

“The Israeli blockade imposed by Israel on the Gaza Strip since 2006 restricting the movement of citizens and goods, in addition to three wars in 2008–2012–2014, and the division of Palestinian forces, created a complex and difficult political, economic and social reality.”

Also in 2019, following “Operation Black Belt”, the Head of the Popular Committee Against the Israeli Siege on Gaza, MP Jamal Al-Khodari, said that Gaza still needs $280 million to rebuild homes demolished during Israel’s 2014 offensive on the enclave, which lasted 51-days and killed 2,200 people and caused massive damage to the Strip’s buildings and infrastructure.

Al-Khodari said, in a statement, that the reconstruction of these homes is a “humanitarian, ethical and legal issue”, noting that women, children and men who used to live in these homes “are currently homeless”.

Watching their homes being bombed and reduced to mountains of debris-scattered holes each time after rebuilding and barely recovering, has become a vicious cycle in brutalised Gaza, home to more than two million people.

It has been repeatedly proven that the international community issuing statements of concern and donating aid, offers very little in the way of resistance to Israel’s 15-year blockade. The UN predicted in 2012 that Gaza would be uninhabitable by 2020. Unfortunately, by countless measures, the prediction has proved right.

How many more times must Gaza be rebuilt to be bombed again, for the international community to understand that the reality is, for Gaza to have a future without destruction and suffering, a complete end to the inhumane land, sea and air blockade imposed by apartheid Israel is the only solution?

The crippling siege on the Gaza Strip is protecting no one except the Israeli regime and its freedom to kill, maim and traumatise Palestinians, with zero consequences.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor or Informed Comment.

Middle East Monitor

This work by Middle East Monitor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.The first sentence was edited for Informed Comment house style.

Filed Under: Israel/ Palestine

About the Author

Middle East Monitor is a not-for-profit press monitoring organization, founded on 1 July 2009, and based in London. Journalists who have written for it include Amelia Smith, Diana Alghoul, Ben White, Jehan Alfarra and Jessica Purkiss. The editorial line straddles the British left and the British Muslim religious Right.

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