palestine and israel War: Latest News and Live Updates
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Some Gazans Say Polio Drive Is Futile While Israel Keeps Bombing
The Palestinian economy is “in free fall,” the United Nations reported Thursday, with production in Gaza plunging to one-sixth of its level before Israeli forces began a blistering military response to the Oct. 7 attacks in the territory.
The report from UN Trade and Development, or UNCTAD, also warned of “rapid and alarming economic decline" in the West Bank, citing expanded Israeli settlements, land confiscations, demolition of Palestinian buildings and violence by settlers.
The report made no mention of corruption in Palestinian institutions.
“The Palestinian economy is in free fall,” Pedro Manuel Moreno, the agency’s deputy secretary-general, told reporters in Geneva. “The report calls for the international community to halt this economic free fall, address the humanitarian crisis, and lay the groundwork for lasting peace and development.”
That would include a “comprehensive recovery plan” for Palestinian areas, more international aid, the lifting of Israel’s blockade on Gaza, and the release of revenues and withheld funds for Palestinians retained by Israel, he said.
Gaza’s economy was weak even before the war, when unemployment was close to 50%, but the war has brought it to a near-standstill, with the U.N. estimating that roughly 90% of the territory’s population has been displaced, many living in squalid tent camps and dependent on international aid.
The war has also hurt the West Bank. After the Oct. 7 attacks, Israel immediately revoked work permits that allowed some 150,000 Palestinians to work inside Israel, depriving them of a key source of income.
A military crackdown that Israel says is aimed at militants has also rippled through the economy, with frequent army raids and military checkpoints making it difficult for people to work or move around.
With violence continuing, there's little sign of any recovery plan being launched anytime soon.
Mutasim Elagraa, who coordinates UNCTAD's assistance to Palestinians, said: “If we want to return Gaza to pre-October 2023, we need tens of billions of dollars, or even more, and decades.”
The ultimate goal is “to put Gaza on a path of sustainable development,” which will take more time and money, he said.
Economic output in Gaza plunged to just over $221 million in the half-year including the last quarter of 2023 and first quarter of 2024 — the last quarter for which figures are available — or about 16% of the total figure for the same half-year period in 2022 and 2023, when the total was just over $1.34 billion, the agency said.
Meanwhile, more than 300,000 jobs in the West Bank — home to some 3 million Palestinians — have been lost, driving unemployment rates up to 32%, up from under 13% before the conflict, the agency reported.
By early this year, as much as 96% of Gaza's farming assets, including livestock farms, orchards, machinery and storage facilities, had been “decimated,” UNCTAD said.
Over 80% of businesses were damaged or destroyed, and the damage has continued to worsen, it said.
Since the 1990s, Israel has collected import duties for Palestinians — leaving about two-thirds of all Palestinian tax revenue under the control of the Israeli government. Israel has repeatedly withheld or suspended the payments, accusing the Palestinian Authority of encouraging violence or taking hostile steps against Israel in the U.N. and other international bodies.
From 2019 through April this year, Israel had withheld or deducted a total of more than $1.4 billion, crimping the ability of Palestinian officials to provide public services and pay salaries, pensions and debts, it said. The European Union last month said it paid some $43 million to help the Palestinian Authority pay salaries and pensions in the West Bank.
Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed at least 41,084 Palestinians and wounded another 95,029, the territory’s Health Ministry said. The ministry’s count does not differentiate between civilians and militants.
Israel launched its campaign vowing to destroy the Palestinian group Hamas after the Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel in which militants killed some 1,200 people and abducted 250 others.
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Associated Press journalist Josef Federman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
As the first phase of a polio vaccination campaign in Gaza nears completion, the effort has an air of futility, even absurdity, for many families there. They can shield their children from a potentially crippling disease, but not from a far more immediate and deadly threat: daily Israeli bombing.
“Whether we vaccinate or not, it doesn’t make any difference,” said Mohammed al-Sabti, 32, in Nuseirat, a town in the central Gaza Strip. “Death and danger are chasing us at every second.”
On Wednesday, an airstrike in the central Gazan town of Nuseirat, on a United Nations school complex sheltering displaced Palestinians, killed 18 people, including women and children, and wounded a similar number, Palestinian officials said. Israel said nine of the dead were Hamas militants using the site as a command-and-control post. The main U.N. relief agency in Gaza, known as UNRWA, said six of them were its employees.
Last week, the site was being used for polio inoculations, UNRWA said.
The day the complex was struck, UNRWA said that the Gaza inoculation campaign had given a first dose of polio vaccine to some 530,000 children, nearing the target of 640,000. The vaccine campaign, which UNRWA undertook in collaboration with local health authorities, the W.H.O. and other partners, has required Israel and Hamas to agree to staggered temporary truces in the areas health workers were vaccinating. The two parties will have to agree to similar “humanitarian pauses” for a second dose for each child next month, health care workers say, for the campaign to be a success.
More than 40,000 Gazans have been killed in the 11-month war, according to the local health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.
Israeli attacks have put much of Gaza’s sewage and water systems out of commission, and many people live in makeshift shelters and tents, clustered in encampments that lack enough sanitation, clean water, food and medical care.
Diseases thrive in such conditions, and alarm rippled among health experts around the world after the poliovirus — the focus of a long and mostly successful global vaccination campaign over decades — was found circulating in Gaza wastewater in July.
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