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The total number of Palestinians made homeless by
Zionist’s military demolition campaign climbed above 12,000 this month
following a rapid acceleration of the policy in Gaza during the first
quarter of this year.
Since the beginning of the
current strife in September 2000 until April 30 2003, a total of 12,737
people had seen their homes demolished in Gaza and the West Bank.
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA),
which is responsible for the welfare for almost all of those affected,
is trying to raise donor funds to replace the lost shelters in the
occupied Palestinian territory.
Recent months have
seen a sharp increase in house demolitions in the Gaza Strip. At the end
of 2002, total and partial demolitions had until then averaged under 30
per month. In the first three months of 2003, 221 shelters were
demolished or damaged beyond repair - making an average of 74 per month.
These alone housed 401 families (2,273 persons).
Demolitions often
occur late at night with little or no warning. Israeli military units -
supported by tanks, APCs and helicopters - enter Palestinian areas to
destroy a variety of targeted houses. A great many demolitions have
occurred near Gaza's border with Egypt where “Israel” is building a
security fence. Houses close to settlements are often also destroyed. In
some cases the demolished buildings belong to the families of militants
or Palestinians detained in Israeli jails. Increasingly, explosives
rather than bulldozers are used to destroy property creating widespread
collateral damage.
UNRWA has so far been able to complete only 158 new shelters for
homeless families and is working on 160 more. A further 471 shelters,
including those destroyed in Jenin in April 2002, are at the planning
and design stage, but security concerns have caused delays to
rebuilding.
Peter Hansen,
UNRWA's Commissioner-General, is currently visiting the Nordic countries
for meetings with Governments in the region. He said: "Even as we
rebuild, it is impossible for UNRWA to keep pace with the current level
of destruction in the occupied territory. Even if peace were to break
out tomorrow there would be an ongoing need for funds for reconstruction
to help all those families who have lost their homes in this conflict."
Mr Hansen will discuss donor funding for UNRWA's emergency operations
and the humanitarian situation in the occupied Palestinian territory in
a series of meetings with the Governments of Denmark, Sweden, Norway and
Finland and with regional NGOs.
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