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Comments are in parentheses. |
Comparison by Numbers Between Israeli Aggressors and
their Palestinian Victims in the Occupied Territories
By the numbers: Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories
Date: 01 / 07 / 2009 Time: 12:15 TEL AVIV, 30
June 2009 (IRIN) -
A new report by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
paints a grim picture of life in the Gaza Strip: insufficient housing,
damaged infrastructure, limited access to clean water and the discharge
of raw sewage into the sea.
The report identifies restrictions
on the movement of people and goods over the past two years as one of
the main causes of the crisis in Gaza. ICRC demands that the
restrictions be lifted.
According to the report, about 1.5
million Gazans are still unable to rebuild their lives. Thousands of
Gazans, whose homes and belongings were destroyed during the 23-day
Israeli offensive which ended on 18 January 2009, are still without
adequate shelter.
"Israel has the right to protect its
population against attacks," Antoine Grand, head of the ICRC's
sub-delegation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), said in a
statement. "But does that mean that 1.5 million people in Gaza do not
have the right to live a normal life?"
Israel controls three
land crossings into Gaza, as well as the coastal border (the sole
airstrip in Gaza was destroyed by Israel in 2001). Only 30-40 selected
commercial items are allowed into Gaza, compared to the 4,000 approved
before the Israeli clampdown.
Anne-Sophie Bonefeld from ICRC in
Jerusalem said people's diets were being affected.
"They might
still be getting enough calories, but for the children this has resulted
in deficiencies in iron, vitamin A and vitamin D, which may lead to
stunted growth, immune system weakness and reduced learning abilities.
ICRC also wishes to stress that Gaza is sinking deeper into poverty and
this is likely to affect the children most of all."
Physicians
for Human Rights
Ran Yaron, OPT project manager at Physicians for
Human Rights (PHR), a US-based NGO, told IRIN: ''The report corroborates
PHR claims during and after the [Israeli military] operation regarding
the breakdown of the medical system and civil society in Gaza."
"Israeli policy… does not allow patients to leave Gaza and on the other
hand controls the medical system in Gaza in two ways - not allowing
medical staff out of Gaza for training, and… preventing the entry of
supplies and equipment needed for the system to function at accepted
standards,'' Yaron said.
The Israeli Defence Ministry's
Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) unit,
which coordinates civilian and humanitarian aid issues between the
government, the Israeli Defense Forces, international organizations and
the Palestinian Authority, declined to comment.
Officials at the
Israeli Ministry of Justice told IRIN: "We have received the report and
are now examining it.''
Israel and OPT in statistics
Population in 2007 Israel 7.18 million OPT 3.71 million
Economy
Gross National Income (GNI) per capita in 2005 Israel: US$22,930 OPT:
US$1,290
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2005 Israel: $133.19
billion OPT: $4.02 billion
Demographics Adolescent fertility
rate (births per 1,000 women aged 15-19) in 2007 Israel: 14 OPT: 79
Total fertility rate (the number of births per woman) 2000-2005
Israel: 2.9 OPT: 5.8
Health Child mortality (under-five) rate in
2007 Israel: 5 OPT: 27
TB prevalence in 2005 Israel: 6 cases per
every 100,000 OPT: 36
IT Number of mobile cellular subscriptions
per 100 people: Israel: 124 OPT 28
Number of telephone mainlines
per 1,000 people in 2005 Israel: 424 OPT: 96
Number of Internet
users per 1,000 people in 2005: Israel: 470 OPT: 67
Nutrition
Less than 2.5 percent of Israel's population was undernourished in
2002/04, as against 16 percent in OPT.
(Sources: UN Human
Development Report 2007/2008 and World Bank)
***This item comes
to from IRIN, the UN's humanitarian news service. The information in
this article was not compiled by Ma'an's reporters and does not
necessarily represent Ma'an's views.
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