Israel has only marginally eased its three-year-old blockade of the Gaza Strip, leaving business and construction largely frozen in the impoverished and war-damaged Palestinian territory, a report by several aid groups said yesterday.
The groups accused Israel of ducking promises to ease the blockade’s effects on civilians, a pledge it made under pressure after a deadly Israeli commando raid in May on an international flotilla protesting the restrictions. The report said Israel is allowing in more food and some building materials but is dragging its feet on major construction projects and still banning most exports.
“We aren’t seeing an easing of the blockade compared to Israel’s declared aims,” said Karl Schembri of Oxfam, among the 21 groups behind the report.
Others included Amnesty International and Save the Children.
“It’s not having any impact,” he said.
Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said Israel is easing the blockade but must check everything entering Gaza.
“We want to see civilian goods reach the civilian population of the Gaza Strip,” he said. “Obviously goods have to be checked to make sure weapons and dual-use goods don’t enter the Gaza Strip.”
Israel and Egypt imposed the blockade on Gaza after Hamas seized the coastal strip of 2.5 million people in June 2007.
The blockade kept out raw materials for factories and construction — hindering economic recovery and reconstruction after Israel’s winter offensive last year against Hamas, which left thousands of Gaza buildings in ruins. It also penned in residents, banned exports and restricted fuel to Gaza.
Gaza residents largely made due with goods — ranging from cows to computers — smuggled through tunnels under the border with Egypt.
Israel says the blockade seeks to weaken Hamas, but the militant group obtains building materials, weapons and cash through the tunnels, meaning shortages most harshly affect civilians.
On May 31, Israeli commandos raided an international flotilla seeking to break the blockade, killing nine activists on a Turkish ferry boat. The incident drew international criticism and Israel said it would ease the blockade and facilitate large projects supervised by the UN and other aid groups.
The report said Israel’s easing has focused on food and consumer products, which have largely replaced dusty, tunnel-smuggled goods on Gaza’s shelves, but it has had little effect on larger projects.
The UN has plans to build 100 schools and 10,000 housing units, some to replace those destroyed in the war. The report said it has been able to start only 7 percent of these and that even they have been slowed by Israeli bureaucracy and strict border crossings.
Israel has allowed other groups to begin work on projects like sewage plants, wells and community centers, but the report describes these as marginal.
Overall, 11 percent of the materials entering Gaza before the blockade are now getting in, the report said, adding that the continued ban on most exports and raw materials keeps 65 percent of factories shut.
About 40 percent of Gazans are unemployed and 80 percent depend on aid.
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