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Palestinians walk down a street with their belongings after leaving their homes in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip on October 22, 2024. -- AFP
Palestinians walk down a street with their belongings after leaving their homes in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip on October 22, 2024. -- AFP

War has knocked Gaza back to the 1950s, says UNDP

BERLIN: The war by Zionist entity has devastated the Palestinian economy and left nearly all of Gaza’s population in poverty, with quality of life indicators such as health and education knocked back 70 years, the United Nations’ development agency said on Tuesday.

Launching a study on the war’s socioeconomic impacts, the UNDP’s Chitose Noguchi said the economy of the Palestinian territories - the Gaza Strip and the Zionist entity-occupied West Bank - was now 35 percent smaller than it was at the start of Zionist entity’s invasion of Gaza a year ago. By some measures the poverty level in Gaza was now approaching 100 percent as a result of the disruption, with unemployment now at 80 percent, Noguchi said.

“The state of Palestine is experiencing unprecedented levels of setbacks,” she told a UN press conference in Geneva over a sometimes crackling line from Deir Al-Balah. “For Gaza, reversing development by an estimated 70 years to 1955.”

Even under optimal conditions, with international aid remaining at current levels and flowing into Gaza and the West Bank unhindered, it would still take at least a decade for economic output to recover to pre-war levels, she said. Schools, hospitals and other essential infrastructure have been razed to the ground. Nearly 43,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, according to health ministry figures.

Some 3.3 million Palestinians, 2.3 million of them in Gaza and 1.5 million of them children, need urgent humanitarian assistance, the report said. The cost of repairing damaged infrastructure was expected to run to $18.5 billion, almost the entire annual economic output of the Palestinian territories in 2022.

The war had taken a similarly severe toll on human capital, the report added, with 625,000 students in Gaza having no access to education at the end of September and 93 percent of school buildings severely damaged. The situation was similar with regard to healthcare. A total of 986 health workers had been killed by the end of September, and less than half of primary healthcare centers were even partially functional. — Reuters

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