50 aid groups demand Israel lift Gaza blockade (AP) Associated Press) By IBRAHIM BARZAK GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip 06/14/12 9:33 am ET)
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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip – Fifty international aid groups and U.N.
agencies on Thursday urged Israel to open Gaza´s borders, saying its
border blockade violates international law and indiscriminately harms
Gaza´s 1.6 million people.
The appeal was issued on the fifth anniversary of the imposition of
the blockade, triggered by the violent takeover of Gaza by the
Islamic militant Hamas in June 2007. Two years ago, Israel started
allowing imports of most consumer goods, but continues to ban
virtually all Gaza exports and travel through Israeli crossings.
Israel has said the blockade is meant to prevent Hamas from building
up its military arsenal and Gaza militants from carrying out attacks
on Israel. The Hamas founding charter calls for the destruction of
Israel, and over its 25-year history, the group has killed hundreds
of Israelis in shootings and bombings.
However, international aid agencies say the blockade mainly punishes
ordinary Gazans by crippling the territory´s economy, forcing foreign
donors to spend money on humanitarian relief instead of investing in
the economy.
"What Gaza needs is real development, but because of the blockade we
are obliged to concentrate on humanitarian work," Filippo Grandi,
head of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, told reporters in Gaza on
Thursday. UNRWA is Gaza´s biggest foreign agency, supporting some 1.2
million refugees and their descendants in the territory.
Spending on emergency needs, such as food and medicine, does not
address fundamental problems, Grandi said. "In fact, it´s a waste of
money, but a waste we are obliged to make because of the blockade,"
he added. He said his agency is running low on funds and, among other
things, had to cancel its popular summer camps for tens of thousands
of Gaza children.
In its six-decade history in Gaza, UNRWA´s main roles have been
supplying refugees with basic food products and operating schools.
One-third of Gaza´s labor force is unemployed, and exports are at
only 5 percent of what they were in 2007, he said.
The easing of import restrictions spurred some growth, but mainly
because Gaza started from a very low baseline, Grandi said, noting
that the per capita GDP in 2011 remained at 10 percent below the 2005
level.
About 60 percent of Gazans are under 18 and youth unemployment stands
at 51 percent, according to U.N. figures.
Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said restrictions remain in
place because Hamas has not dropped its violent agenda. Over the
years, Gaza-based militants have fired thousands of rockets at
southern Israel, though since a major round of fighting more than
three years ago, Hamas has largely held its fire. Smaller groups,
however, continue to fire rockets sporadically into Israel.
Israel´s government holds Hamas responsible for all violence from
Gaza.
"The fundamental reason for the lack of economic development in Gaza
is that the extremist Hamas regime puts its jihadist radical agenda
above and beyond the interests of the people of Gaza," Regev said.
Israel withdrew soldiers and settlers from Gaza in 2005, but
maintained control over access to the territory by sea and air and
through Gaza-Israel land crossings. In June 2006, after Hamas
captured an Israeli soldier, Israel began tightening restrictions
before the full blockade was imposed a year later.
Egypt went along with Israel until the fall of President Hosni
Mubarak last year. Since then, Egypt has allowed more Gazans to enter
through its border crossing, but continues to impose some
restrictions.
Among the signatories of Thursday´s appeal were 43 aid groups and
seven U.N. agencies, including the World Health Organization. (© 2012
The Associated Press 06/14/12)
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