A UN official in war-battered Gaza yesterday called for a “genuine political process” to avert further bloodshed after the military conflict between Israel and Hamas that ravaged the Palestinian enclave.
As thousands of Gazans slowly tried to piece back together their lives, top UN staff visited the territory after an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire Friday halted 11 days of mutual bombardment.
Yesterday, in a badly-damaged district of Gaza city, volunteers swept up clouds of dust at the feet of collapsed buildings, while others shovelled debris onto the back of a donkey-drawn cart.
Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip since May 10 have killed more than 200 Palestinians, rendered thousands homeless and laid waste to buildings and key infrastructure across the blockaded territory.
It was the latest such bombardment to hit the crowded coastal strip of some 2mn people, after three previous wars with Israel since 2008.
Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA, said the reconstruction needed to go hand in hand with efforts to create “a different political environment”.
“We need to have a genuine focus on human development,” on proper access to education, jobs and livelihoods, he said.
“But this needs to be accompanied by a genuine political process”.
Speaking earlier to a group of journalists, he said “the layers of hardship in Gaza keep getting thicker”, because the root causes of the conflict have not been addressed.
BLINKEN SUPPORTS
TWO-STATE SOLUTION
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, speaking ahead of an imminent trip to the region, reaffirmed Washington’s support for a two-state solution so Israelis and Palestinians can live “with equal measures of security, of peace and dignity”. Israeli strikes on Gaza killed 248 Palestinians, including 66 children, and have wounded over 1,900 people, the Gaza health ministry says.
Rockets from Gaza claimed 12 lives in Israel, including one child and an Arab-Israeli teenager, an Israeli soldier, one Indian, and two Thai nationals, medics say.
Some 357 people in Israel have been wounded.
There is controversy about how many of those killed in Gaza were combatants, and how many were civilians.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed the bombing campaign had killed “more than 200 fighters” in Gaza.
Lynn Hastings, of the UN humanitarian agency OCHA, said the intense bombing had devastated people’s mental health. During the last war in 2014, “we had humanitarian pauses, where people were able to get out,” she said.
“That really speaks to the amount of trauma that was experienced this time, where there was absolutely no pause for people to breathe.
“The comments that I have heard are not ‘I need access to water’ — even though there are 800,000 people who don’t have access to clean water right now — but about the impacts on their lives overall and how they are ever going to recover from this,” she said.
Authorities Saturday started distributing tents and mattresses in the Gaza Strip, as OCHA said at least 6,000 people had been made homeless by the bombardment.
Lorries bringing much-needed medicine, food and fuel entered Gaza on Friday through the Kerem Shalom crossing after Israel reopened it.
Peace talks have stalled since 2014, including over the status of occupied east Jerusalem and Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Yesterday, Jewish visitors entered the Al Aqsa compound for the first time in about three weeks. A Palestinian presidential spokesman warned the Israeli visits could “sabotage” the Gaza ceasefire. Israeli police on Friday fired stun grenades at worshippers in the Al Aqsa compound, and beat an AFP photographer covering the unrest. The incident was reminiscent of the tensions that sparked the latest round of conflict.
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