UN Seeks $34 Million to Aid Gazans
UN Seeks $34 Million to Aid Gazans As Israeli Military Operation Continues
New York, Jan 1 2009 5:10PM
The United Nations agency tasked with assisting Palestinian refugees has appealed for $34 million to address the humanitarian needs of the population of Gaza, whose needs continue to mount amid an ongoing Israeli military operation that began on 27 December.
The funds will enable the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) to provide emergency food, shelter, medical supplies, fuel and cash assistance for a four-month period.
The $34 million is in addition to the $275 million UNRWA sought in the 2009 Emergency Appeal it issued in December for the occupied Palestinian territory.
"In my eight years
in UNRWA, the urgency of an appeal for the people here has
never been so acute," UNRWA Commissioner General Karen
AbuZayd said in a
"I am appalled and saddened when I see the suffering
around me? I call on the international community to respond
with the promptness and generosity demanded by the desperate
situation in Gaza today," she added. Essential
humanitarian supplies were already in short supply in Gaza
before the military operation began because Israel kept
border crossings into the area closed, citing rocket and
other attacks by Gaza militants. Although it is difficult
to get reliable figures on casualties, the UN estimates that
between 320 and 380 people have died in the operation which
is now in its sixth day and between 1,500 and 1,900 have
been wounded. In addition, four Israelis have been killed by
Hamas rockets.
The airstrikes have inflicted considerable
damage to already fragile public infrastructure and erased
Gaza's public service capacity, thus making UNRWA's
humanitarian interventions more crucial than ever, the
Agency stressed. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and other
wo At
an emergency
"I urge
all members of the international community, in particular
those in the region, to exert what influence they have on
the parties to end this violence now," Mr. Ban told the
meeting, which was convened at the request of Libya and
Egypt on behalf of the Arab Group. "I welcome the efforts
underway, including by Arab and European leaders but I must
repeat: not enough has been done, and more is urgently
required." Ms. AbuZayd has also stressed the need for
greater efforts by the inter "I think that lots of pressure
needs to be put on both parties to stop the violence, to
agree to have some sort of truce or lull, for a ceasefire
that will last so people aren't afraid of what might happen
next or when it's going to all start again," she told the UN
News Centre as part of its
ENDS
dquarters in Gaza.
rld leaders have repeatedly called for an immediate
ceasefire, but so far those calls have gone unheeded.
national community to ensure
an end to the violence.