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"We need your generous support," said Egeland. (Reuters)
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STOCKHOLM -- UN relief coordinator Jan Egeland on
Friday, September 1, implored donor states to dig deep into their
pockets to help the Palestinian people, warning that the situation in
the Gaza Strip was a "ticking time bomb".
"We need your generous support, as we need
your help to ensure that there is a cessation of hostilities and that
there is more access into and out of the Palestinian
territories," Egeland said at the opening of a conference of
donor nations in Stockholm, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Officials from some 30 countries and some 20
international organizations were attending the conference, called to
bolster the supply of humanitarian aid to the Palestinian territories,
in particular the Gaza Strip.
The conference is hosted by Sweden, Norway and
Spain in collaboration with the UN.
The UN has had difficulty raising the 385 million
dollars (300 million euros) deemed necessary to avoid a humanitarian
crisis in the wake of the recent upsurge in violence in the region.
"It is many ways incomprehensible that we have
only 43 percent of this appeal covered," Egeland said.
He criticised the isolation of the Palestinians,
especially the closure of the road linking a supply facility in Karni
to Gaza.
According latest UN estimates, there is now a
one-month stock of food in densely populated Gaza which relies on
external food shipments through border checkpoints which have been
periodically closed by Israel.
The World Bank has warned that EU and US aid cuts,
following Hamas's landslide parliamentary elections win in January,
would adversely impact at least 30 percent of the Palestinian
population which is dependent on government salaries.
Unemployment stands at around 45 percent and the
World Bank has estimated that two-thirds of the Gaza Strip population
(1.4 million) lives under the poverty line, earning less than two
dollars a day.
Each square kilometer (0.4 square mile) in Gaza
Strip shelters an average of 2,350 Palestinians, making it one of the
most densely populated areas in the world.
Collapsing
The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) also
warned on Friday that the Palestinian economy was collapsing.
"The Gazan economy is collapsing and there is
no trust for the future, no investment and no hope," Arnold
Vercken, WFP director for Gaza and the West Bank, told Reuters in an
interview.
"A signal of hope must be given to the Gazans
to re-start the economy. It is a situation of survival."
Infrastructure is also crippled while industries
which have formed the backbone of the territory's economy, mainly
farming and fishing, are in sharp decline, Vercken said.
"There is no more grain in the four major
silos of the four major mills, and even if we are providing food to
some of the needy in Gaza, that is 15-16 percent of the population,
the trade has completely collapsed," he said.
"Since June no fishing is allowed at all and
in fact you come to the fishing port and there is no more smell of
fish. This puts out of work about 35,000 people who were living from
the fishing industry."
Vercken said the WFP hoped the donor conference,
coming on the heels of a Lebanon meeting in Stockholm on Thursday,
August 31, which raised more than $940 million, would secure funding
of its relief effort in Gaza.
The body is running a two-year operation in the
territory, begun one year ago, which requires funding of $103 million,
just under half of which has been secured.
"We have funding up to two months ahead,"
Vercken said.
The Israeli army has killed at least 200
Palestinians, about half of them civilians, in the Gaza strip since it
launched a wide-scale offensive after Palestinian fighters took
prisoner a soldier in late June. Palestinians, however, see the
assault as a ruse to topple the Hamas-led government.