Palestinian refugees: Living without work is a slow death

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Bakaa refugee camp, north of Amman. (AFP)
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UNRWA staff protest job cuts at the agency’s Gaza City HQ. (AFP)
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Palestinian boys collect rubble to sell for recycling, in the Shati refugee camp in Gaza City. (AFP)
Updated 05 August 2018
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Palestinian refugees: Living without work is a slow death

  • The Americans and other donors are putting political pressure on UNRWA with the aim of eventually changing the meaning of a refugee, and liquidating the Palestinian cause by cancelling the heart of UNRWA
  • The Gaza Strip has been living under harsh conditions for years

AMMAN/GAZA CITY: Six years ago, Mohammad Shabban was delighted when he found employment with the United Nations Refugee Works Agency (UNRWA), the international agency set up to take care of Palestinian refugees until they could return home.
UNRWA has become a fixture in the 58 official refugee camps dotted through Jordan, the West Bank
(including Jerusalem) Gaza, Syria and Lebanon. It provides primary education, health services and works hard at keeping the densely populated camps clean.
As a Palestinian refugee, Shaaban had priority when the UN agency was looking to hire cleaning staff.
He joined two dozen cleaners working at Husn refugee camp, north of Jordan, near the second largest city of Irbid. Jordan, with two million registered refugees, has the largest number of Palestinians, who were forced to leave their homes in the wars of 1948 and 1967.
Shaaban said things were good for him at Husn, which is home to more than 50,000 Palestinian refugees.
He was paid about 416 Jordanian dinars a month ($587, SR2,199).
Then, last January, after he had an accident, he found it difficult to continue working in such a physical job.
“I went to the camp director and asked to be transferred to another job not so physically demanding, but they said they had no other work for me,” he told Arab News.
Shaaban lost his job, even though as a non-citizen in Jordan he would face a struggle to find another. Thirteen sanitation workers also lost their work at the camp. Some had temporary contracts, which were not renewed when they expired.
Nabeeh Aref began street cleaning at Husn camp in 2017, after being hired on a temporary basis for six months. When his contract expired, he was let go.
“They told me you can work through Ramadan, but then we can’t renew your contract.”
Aref said he is called back on Fridays to help clean the streets and is paid 10 Jordanian dinars a day.
He has found another job, but it is nearly at the minimum wage. With a rented house and a daughter to support, he can hardly make ends meet it on the 250 Jordanian dinars a month wages he receives.
They are by no means the only ones: 23 percent of Palestine refugees in Husn camp have an income below the national poverty line of 814 Jordanian dinars. Unemployment is the highest of the ten Palestine refugee camps in Jordan, with 18 percent of refugees who live in the camp unemployed.
Eyad Mirai lives in the Husn refugee camp, but doesn’t work for UNRWA. He has been keeping a close eye on his refugee camp as the garbage started piling up and the smell has become unbearable.
“We had 24 sanitation workers and now they are down to 11. This week, three are away on vacation, so we are left with eight individuals that have to keep a large refugee camp of more than 50,000 clean. It is impossible. The garbage is piling up, rodents are multiplying and the smell is terrible.”
Mirai understands that the problem is not with the director or staff of the UN agency. “I don’t believe it is a local problem,” he told Arab News. “It is clear that there are US orders to UNRWA and to the Palestinian leadership.”
At Shati camp on the northern Gaza strip, Abdel Rahman Lubbad, 49, used to be regarded by his neighbors as one of the lucky ones.
He has worked with UNRWA for more than 22 years in the emergency program, providing food and other assistance to Palestinian refugees. But now he too is without work.
“The neighbors were saying that the UNRWA staff is the last segment that can worry about their future, because they are working with an international organization. “Now I tell them, I have no work,” he told Arab News.
Lubbad has lived in the Shati camp since birth and supports his family of eight. He will discuss his next moves with his sons, conscious that he cannot afford to be without work.
“I’m going to get some savings, a few thousands of dollars, it won’t be enough to rely on. I will think of a project with my sons. But the economic conditions in Gaza make starting any project a waste of money without a return.
“I was shocked when I received a message stating that my contract would not be renewed. I am now simply unemployed. Gaza has no jobs for young people, so what about a person on the edge of their fifties?” Lubbad asked.
Samira Al-Far, 41, worked in the mental health program, providing psychosocial support to Palestinian refugees. Now she needs support herself after she lost her job at UNRWA after working with the agency for nearly 10 years.
“I have only this salary to support my family of six,” she said. “My husband has not worked at all for seven years as a result of injury during the war. “My family will now be entitled to food aid from UNRWA, but even UNRWA will not be able to provide it, (because of) its deep financial crisis.” The Gaza Strip is suffering from a major economic crisis and the unemployment rate is more than 60 percent, especially among young people.
“The problem is not job loss, but the opportunities are very scarce and what is available is not commensurate with the minimum wage,” Al-Far said. “I have a family, I need a new job.”
Engineer Khalil Abu Rajab, 45, worked in the emergency program for 17 years. Now he has a partial contract and will receive half of his salary until the end of the year. “I am lucky compared with my colleagues,” he said. “My family is small. I have two children. I own a house and I do not pay rent, but I will be unemployed. “Life in Gaza is very difficult. The unemployment rate among engineers is almost 90 per cent.
“People are afraid of wars because wars take lives, but they do not know that living without work or income will be a slow death,” said Abu Rajab. The Gaza Strip has been living under harsh conditions for years. Residents have suffered from three wars in 10 years, with a new wave of confrontation under intense tension along the border and an Israeli blockade since Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007.
Samira Al-Abed, a psychologist at the UNRWA agency, fears that she will lose her job in the coming days. “It is not enough that we are afraid of war. Even the job, which is the minimum of our life, is threatened,” she said.
Al-Abed pays university tuition fees for two of her children, and if she loses her job her children will not be able to complete their studies.
“I save a large part of my salary to cover university tuition fees. My husband is working to cover our household expenses. We will have to postpone the study if there is a salary break. We only have this salary after paying the instalments owed to the bank.” Mohammad Said, who runs a center for the handicapped in the Baqaa refugee camp, said that UNRWA has a clear political mandate. “UNRWA has been entrusted with taking care of refugees until their return in accordance with UN Resolution 194,” he told Arab News. “UNRWA is the witness to the Nakba (“the catastrophe” when more than 700,000 Palestinians left their homes during the 1948 war), and we will not accept its dissolution until the resolution of the Palestinian cause.”
Ahmad Awad, the director of the Phenix Center for Economic and Informatics Studies in Amman, said that UNRWA is under tremendous pressure from the US and others. “The Americans and other donors are putting political pressure on UNRWA with the aim of eventually changing the meaning of a refugee, and liquidating the Palestinian cause by cancelling the heart of UNRWA, which is the right of return.” UNRWA has found itself in a political battle with the employees’ union. The union leadership has been complaining of intervention by the Jordan field office to international bodies, but to no avail.
Finally, the executive committee of the workers’ union resigned in protest, especially after UNRWA made deductions from workers’ wages for the one-hour strikes that they carried out. UNRWA spokesperson Sami Mshasha told Arab News that the UN agency has tried to work in accordance to regulation. “We have worked according to the bylaws of the workers’ committee, and when we had a problem we sought legal advice,” he said. Mshasha said that the legal counsel was sometimes in favor of the workers and sometimes not.


Israel’s Rafah attack set Hamas talks ‘backward’: mediator Qatar

Updated 3 sec ago
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Israel’s Rafah attack set Hamas talks ‘backward’: mediator Qatar

DOHA, QATAR: Israel’s military operation in Rafah has set truce negotiations with Hamas “backward,” mediator Qatar said on Tuesday, adding that talks have reached “almost a stalemate.”
“Especially in the past few weeks, we have seen some momentum building but unfortunately things didn’t move in the right direction and right now we are on a status of almost a stalemate,” Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani told the Qatar Economic Forum.
“Of course, what happened with Rafah has set us backward.”
Qatar, which has hosted Hamas’s political office in Doha since 2012, has been engaged — along with Egypt and the United States — in months of behind-the-scenes mediation between Israel and the Palestinian militant group.
Israel continued to fight Hamas in Rafah on Monday, despite US warnings against a full-scale assault on the south Gaza city that is crowded with displaced Palestinians.
“There is no clarity how to stop the war from the Israeli side. I don’t think that they are considering this as an option... even when we are talking about the deal and leading to a potential ceasefire,” Sheikh Mohammed said.
Israeli politicians were indicating “by their statements that they will remain there, they will continue the war. And there is no clarity on what Gaza will look like after this,” he added.

Nakba: Palestinians mark 76 years of dispossession as a potentially even larger catastrophe unfolds in Gaza

Updated 14 May 2024
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Nakba: Palestinians mark 76 years of dispossession as a potentially even larger catastrophe unfolds in Gaza

  • In Gaza, the refugees and their descendants make up around three-quarters of the population
  • Now, many Palestinians fear a repeat of their painful history on an even more cataclysmic scale

JERUSALEM: Palestinians on Wednesday will mark the 76th year of their mass expulsion from what is now Israel, an event that is at the core of their national struggle. But in many ways, that experience pales in comparison to the calamity now unfolding in Gaza.
Palestinians refer to it as the “Nakba,” Arabic for “catastrophe.” Some 700,000 Palestinians — a majority of the prewar population — fled or were driven from their homes before and during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war that followed Israel’s establishment.
After the war, Israel refused to allow them to return because it would have resulted in a Palestinian majority within its borders. Instead, they became a seemingly permanent refugee community that now numbers some 6 million, with most living in slum-like urban refugee camps in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
In Gaza, the refugees and their descendants make up around three-quarters of the population.
Israel’s rejection of what Palestinians say is their right of return has been a core grievance in the conflict and was one of the thorniest issues in peace talks that last collapsed 15 years ago. The refugee camps have always been the main bastions of Palestinian militancy.
Now, many Palestinians fear a repeat of their painful history on an even more cataclysmic scale.
All across Gaza, Palestinians in recent days have been loading up cars and donkey carts or setting out on foot to already overcrowded tent camps as Israel expands its offensive. The images from several rounds of mass evacuations throughout the seven-month war are strikingly similar to black-and-white photographs from 1948.
Mustafa Al-Gazzar, now 81, still recalls his family’s monthslong flight from their village in what is now central Israel to the southern city of Rafah, when he was 5. At one point they were bombed from the air, at another, they dug holes under a tree to sleep in for warmth.
Al-Gazzar, now a great-grandfather, was forced to flee again over the weekend, this time to a tent in Muwasi, a barren coastal area where some 450,000 Palestinians live in a squalid camp. He says the conditions are worse than in 1948, when the UN agency for Palestinian refugees was able to regularly provide food and other essentials.
“My hope in 1948 was to return, but my hope today is to survive,” he said. “I live in such fear,” he added, breaking into tears. “I cannot provide for my children and grandchildren.”
The war in Gaza, which was triggered by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack into Israel, has killed over 35,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials, making it by far the deadliest round of fighting in the history of the conflict. The initial Hamas attack killed some 1,200 Israelis.
The war has forced some 1.7 million Palestinians — around three quarters of the territory’s population — to flee their homes, often multiple times. That is well over twice the number that fled before and during the 1948 war.
Israel has sealed its border. Egypt has only allowed a small number of Palestinians to leave, in part because it fears a mass influx of Palestinians could generate another long-term refugee crisis.
The international community is strongly opposed to any mass expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza — an idea embraced by far-right members of the Israeli government, who refer to it as “voluntary emigration.”
Israel has long called for the refugees of 1948 to be absorbed into host countries, saying that calls for their return are unrealistic and would endanger its existence as a Jewish-majority state. It points to the hundreds of thousands of Jews who came to Israel from Arab countries during the turmoil following its establishment, though few of them want to return.
Even if Palestinians are not expelled from Gaza en masse, many fear that they will never be able to return to their homes or that the destruction wreaked on the territory will make it impossible to live there. A recent UN estimate said it would take until 2040 to rebuild destroyed homes.
The Jewish militias in the 1948 war with the armies of neighboring Arab nations were mainly armed with lighter weapons like rifles, machine guns and mortars. Hundreds of depopulated Palestinian villages were demolished after the war, while Israelis moved into Palestinian homes in Jerusalem, Jaffa and other cities.
In Gaza, Israel has unleashed one of the deadliest and most destructive military campaigns in recent history, at times dropping 2,000-pound (900-kilogram) bombs on dense, residential areas. Entire neighborhoods have been reduced to wastelands of rubble and plowed-up roads, many littered with unexploded bombs.
The World Bank estimates that $18.5 billion in damage has been inflicted on Gaza, roughly equivalent to the gross domestic product of the entire Palestinian territories in 2022. And that was in January, in the early days of Israel’s devastating ground operations in Khan Younis and before it went into Rafah.
Even before the war, many Palestinians spoke of an ongoing Nakba, in which Israel gradually forces them out of Gaza, the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territories it captured during the 1967 war that the Palestinians want for a future state. They point to home demolitions, settlement construction and other discriminatory policies that long predate the war, and which major rights groups say amount to apartheid, allegations Israel denies.


US doesn’t believe ‘genocide’ occurring in Gaza—White House

Updated 14 May 2024
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US doesn’t believe ‘genocide’ occurring in Gaza—White House

  • White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan insists responsibility for peace lies with Hamas
  • Comments come as ceasefire talks stall and Israel continues striking the southern city of Rafah

WASHINGTON DC: The United States does not believe that genocide is occurring in Gaza but Israel must do more to protect Palestinian civilians, President Joe Biden’s top national security official said Monday.

As ceasefire talks stall and Israel continued striking the southern city of Rafah, White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan insisted that the responsibility for peace lay with militant group Hamas.

“We believe Israel can and must do more to ensure the protection and wellbeing of innocent civilians. We do not believe what is happening in Gaza is a genocide,” Sullivan told a briefing.

The US was “using the internationally accepted term for genocide, which includes a focus on intent” to reach this assessment, Sullivan added.

Biden wanted to see Hamas defeated but realized that Palestinian civilians were in “hell,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan said he was coming to the White House podium to “take a step back” and set out the Biden administration’s position on the conflict, amid criticism from both ends of the US political spectrum.

Biden has come under fire from Republicans for halting some weapons shipments to press his demands that Israel hold off a Rafah offensive, while there have been protests at US universities against his support for Israel.

The US president believed any Rafah operation “has got to be connected to a strategic endgame that also answered the question, ‘what comes next?’” Sullivan added.

This would avoid Israel “getting mired in a counterinsurgency campaign that never ends, and ultimately saps Israel’s strength and vitality.”


US calls on Iran to halt ‘unprecedented’ weapons transfers to Yemen’s Houthis for attacks on ships

Updated 14 May 2024
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US calls on Iran to halt ‘unprecedented’ weapons transfers to Yemen’s Houthis for attacks on ships

  • The Houthis have launched more than 50 attacks on shipping, seized one vessel and sunk another since November, the US Maritime Administration said late last month

UNITED NATIONS: The United States called on Iran on Monday to halt its transfer of an “unprecedented” amount of weaponry to Yemen’s Houthi rebels, enabling its fighters to carry out “reckless attacks” on ships in the Red Sea and elsewhere.
US deputy ambassador Robert Wood told the UN Security Council that if it wants to make progress toward ending the civil war in Yemen it must act collectively to “call Iran out for its destabilizing role and insist that it cannot hide behind the Houthis.”
He said there is extensive evidence that Iran is providing advanced weapons, including ballistic and cruise missiles, to the Houthis in violation of UN sanctions.
“To underscore the council’s concern regarding the ongoing violations of the arms embargo, we must do more to strengthen enforcement and deter sanctions violators,” Wood said.
The Houthis say their attacks on shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden are aimed at pressuring Israel to end its war with Hamas in Gaza, which has killed more than 35,000 Palestinians there. The war began after Hamas-led militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking some 250 others hostage.
The Houthis have launched more than 50 attacks on shipping, seized one vessel and sunk another since November, the US Maritime Administration said late last month.
Houthi attacks have dropped in recent weeks as the rebels have been targeted by a US-led airstrike campaign in Yemen. Shipping through the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden has declined because of the threat.
But Hans Grundberg, the UN special envoy for Yemen, warned the council that “hostilities continue” even though there has been a reduction in attacks on commercial and military vessels in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean as well as a reduction in the number of US and British airstrikes on targets in Yemen.
He pointed to an announcement by the Houthis that they will “expand the scope of attacks,” calling this “a worrisome provocation in an already volatile situation.”
Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told the council that the Israeli announcement on May 6 that it was starting its military operation in Gaza’s southern city of Rafah, where 1.2 million Palestinians had sought safety, ratcheted up the spiral of escalation in the region “another notch further.”
“There’s no doubt that this will have an impact on the situation in Yemen’s surrounding waters,” he said, noting the Houthis’ opposition to Israeli attacks that harm Palestinian civilians.
But, Nebenzia added, “We call for a swift cessation of the shelling of commercial vessels and any other actions that hamper maritime navigation.”
He sharply criticized the United States and its Western allies, saying their “totally unjustified aggressive strikes” in Yemen violate the UN Charter. He said they further complicate an already complex situation and won’t improve the situation in the Red Sea.
The war between the Houthis and pro-government forces in Yemen backed by a coalition of Gulf Arab states has raged since 2014. The Houthis swept down from the mountains, seized much of northern Yemen and the country’s capital, Sanaa, and forced the internationally recognized government to flee into exile to Saudi Arabia. Since then, more than 150,000 people have been killed by the violence and 3 million have been displaced.
Fighting has decreased markedly in Yemen since a truce in April 2022, but there are still hotspots in the country
Grundberg recalled that in December the Houthis and the government “took a courageous step toward a peaceful solution” by agreeing to a series of commitments that would provide for a nationwide ceasefire, ensure desperately needed humanitarian aid, and initiate a political process to end the conflict.
But UN humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths reported “alarmingly high” levels of severe food deprivation across the country that are expected to worsen during the lean season for crops starting in June.
Griffiths also expressed serious concern about a rapidly worsening cholera outbreak. He cited reports of 40,000 suspected cholera cases and over 160 deaths — “a sharp increase” since last month, the majority in Houthi-controlled areas “where hundreds of new cases are reported every day.”


Tunisian police storm lawyers’ headquarters and arrest another lawyer

Updated 14 May 2024
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Tunisian police storm lawyers’ headquarters and arrest another lawyer

  • Dozens of lawyers including Zagrouba gathered earlier on Monday in front of the courtroom, chanting slogans including: “What a shame, the lawyers and the judiciary are under siege”

TUNIS: Tunisian police stormed the bar association’s headquarters for the second time in two days and arrested a lawyer, witnesses said on Monday, after detaining two journalists as well as another lawyer critical of the president over the weekend.
A live broadcast on media website TUNMEDIA showed videos of broken glass doors and toppled chairs while the police arrested the lawyer Mahdi Zagrouba and other lawyers screamed in the background. Zagrouba is a prominent lawyer known for his opposition to President Kais Saied.
On Saturday, police stormed the building of the Tunisian Order of Lawyers and arrested Sonia Dahmani, a lawyer also known for her fierce criticism of Saied.
Dahmani had said on a television program last week that Tunisia was a country where life was not pleasant. She was commenting on a speech by Saied, who said there was a conspiracy to push thousands of undocumented migrants from Sub-Saharan countries to stay in Tunisia.
Some opposition parties described the storming of the lawyers’ building on the weekend as “a shock and major escalation,” and the bar association declared a nationwide strike.
Dozens of lawyers including Zagrouba gathered earlier on Monday in front of the courtroom, chanting slogans including: “What a shame, the lawyers and the judiciary are under siege.”
The Interior Ministry said in a statement that “the judicial decision against Zagrouba was due to his physical and verbal assault on two policemen today near the courtroom.”
Tunisia’s public prosecutor on Monday extended the detention of two journalists, Mourad Zghidi and Borhen Bsaiss, who were also on arrested on Saturday over radio comments and social media posts in a separate incident.
“It’s a horror scene... police entered in a showy manner and arrested Zagrouba and dragged him to the ground before some of them returned to smash the door glass,” said lawyer Kalthoum Kanou who was at the scene.
Saied took office following free elections in 2019, but two years later seized additional powers when he shut down the elected parliament and moved to rule by decree.
He also assumed authority over the judiciary, a step that the opposition called a coup.