39,000 Gaza Children Cannot Attend School Because of
Israeli Siege Preventing After War Reconstruction
Thousands missing out on education in Gaza
Published yesterday (updated) 05/07/2010 20:45
Gaza City -
IRIN -
Thousands of Palestinian refugee children in the Gaza Strip are
unable to receive adequate education, the UN agency for Palestinian
refugees found in a recent report.
About
39,000 children refugees in Gaza will not attend UNRWA schools in 2010,
because the agency is unable to build to accommodate population growth,
or rebuild schools damaged during Israel's war on Gaza, because of the
Israeli blockade, UNRWA spokesman Chris Gunness said.
"My
sons have trouble learning due to the large number of children, usually
over 40 per class," said Gaza resident Noa Ashi.
Her sons Tareq,
9, and Mohammed, 7, attend New Gaza Elementary School A run by UNRWA in
Gaza City. "The classrooms are small and three children share each
desk," she said, adding that Tareq and Mohammed attend school only four
hours a day.
Israel imposed an economic embargo on the Gaza Strip
after a Hamas takeover in June 2007 and in retaliation for the firing of
rockets from Gaza into Israel. Israel considers Hamas a terrorist
organization and says its import restrictions on items such as cement,
steel and most building materials are to prevent Hamas developing
weapons or fortifications.
Israel says there is no humanitarian
crisis in Gaza and most of the basic needs of the local population are
met as at least 140 truckloads of aid are allowed into the Strip
every day.
The UN has said this is far from sufficient.
The Israeli blockade
affects every aspect of human existence and remains the biggest
challenge to UNRWA operations in Gaza, the head of UNRWA, John Ging,
told IRIN. The blockade has destroyed the economy, making 80 percent of
the population dependent on UN handouts, he said.
Infrastructure
is also in a state of collapse: 80 million cubic litres of untreated
sewage is pumped into the Mediterranean Sea each day, and 90 percent of
the water is undrinkable by World Health Organization standards,
according to Ging.
To make matters worse, UNRWA is 25 percent
underfunded, lacking 100 million US dollars out of its 500 million
budget, he added. The agency is only able to provide 40 percent of daily
caloric needs to food aid dependent refugees, while the international
standard in 76 percent.
Overcrowding
UNRWA schools run
double shifts in Gaza due to overcrowding. "We are also unable to
recruit new teachers due to our budget constraints," said UNRWA's
Gunness.
"There are too many students in our school and we lack
the materials to build rooms," said Sufian Ghanem, a mathematics teacher
from Jabaliya Elementary School for Girls B in Gaza City run by UNRWA.
"The children are impoverished, often lacking shoes. The school
lacks a library and place for outdoor activities," said Ghanem.
About 60,000 structures were damaged or destroyed during the Israeli
offensive, according to Gunness, who said an improved infrastructure and
education system in Gaza would only come about when the blockade is
lifted and the Karni crossing is opened.
Karni, the only major
commercial crossing along the Gaza-Israel border, is controlled by
Israel and mostly closed, according to the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
The Gaza government aims to
rebuild, but has been unable to import necessary construction material,
Ahmed Yousef of the Hamas-led government in Gaza told IRIN. Eighteen
months after the offensive three quarters of the resulting damage
remains
un-repaired.
There are 750,000 children living in Gaza. "On
this road and under these conditions - lack of access, physical
deterioration and its psychological effect - the situation will get
worse," said Ging.
More than half of UNRWA's budget goes on
education, with over 20,000 teachers educating half a million
Palestinian children in the Levant countries each day; 222,000 Gaza
children are enrolled in UNRWA schools. UNRWA is responsible for
providing health care and other services to about one million refugees
in Gaza, 800,000 of whom receive food assistance; 70 percent of Gaza's
1.5 million inhabitants are registered refugees.
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