UN Calls for Israel to Open Crossing for Goods
New York, Nov 9 2009 3:10PM
The United Nations and its non-governmental organization (NGO) partners today called yet again on Israel to immediately open crossings into the Gaza Strip to give Palestinians access to desperately needed materials, especially in view of the coming winter and rainy season.
“The winter will be
particularly hard on the children of Gaza, whose capacity to
withstand the rigours of a cold, wet winter has already been
severely undermined by a marked deterioration of basic
services and descent into poverty,” the UN Humanitarian
Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, Maxwell
Gaylard, said in a news release, the latest of countless UN
appeals to reopen the crossings since Israel’s three-week
war against Hamas last winter.
“With winter rains
and cold weather now imminent, the people of Gaza are even
more desperately in need of construction materials such as
cement, roofing tiles and glass to build and repair homes
destroyed and damaged in the Israeli military offensive of
2008-2009, as well as of regular supplies of fuel,
electricity and clean water.”
More than two years of
blockade since Hamas seized control of Gaza coupled with
widespread destruction resulting from the war have caused
severe damage to the homes, roads and utilities, including
tens of thousands of homes damaged or destroyed,
deterioration and further damage to already fragile and
overloaded water, sanitation and electricity distribution
networks, and a marked fall-off in the quality of essential
services, the release said.
“Intensive discussions
which the United Nations has conducted with the Government
of Israel for the resumption of suspended building projects,
which would provide much-needed housing and social services
for the people of Gaza, have not yet yielded any positive
outcome,” it added.
Nearly 1,400 Gazans were killed
and more than 5,000 injured during the three-week offensive,
which Israel says it launched to stop thousands of rockets
fired by Hamas and other Palestinian militants into southern
Israel.
The fighting left communities, families and children fearful and
traumatized, many of them living in ruins, virtually
destitute, and relying increasingly on the UN and its
humanitarian partners for daily sustenance. Over 3,530 homes
were destroyed, more than 2,850 severely damaged and 52,900
suffering minor damage. Without repair, winter winds and
rain will render damaged homes uninhabitable, the release
warned.
Mr. Gaylard and the NGOs called on the Israeli
Government to allow in urgently-needed construction and
repair materials, adequate supplies of industrial fuel for
electricity generation, and essential items for the proper
functioning of water and sanitation systems.
“The
people of Gaza share with everyone else the right to
dignified lives, free of indiscriminate and prolonged
suffering. They should not be subjected to this continuation
of collective punishment brought on by the blockade, Mr.
Gaylard
said.
ENDS