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Occupied Palestinian Territories - Humanitarian Update, February 200722 March 2007Summary of monthly Humanitarian Monitor report produced by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). KEY ISSUES OVERVIEW
Forced displacement The UN reports 53 structures, including 22 Palestinian homes and shelters, demolished by Israeli authorities, mostly in the southern West Bank. The Israeli authorities claim the structures were built without permits. This compares to a monthly average of 17 demolitions throughout 2006. More than 158 people, including 94 children, were displaced. Other vulnerable communities are approximately 3000 Jahalin Bedouin in Area C near the Israeli settlement of Ma'ale Adumim. The community has received demolition orders from the Israeli authorities due to construction of the Separation Wall and settlement expansion.
Child protection Defence for Children International (DCI) reports that 398 Palestinian children (defined as under 18 years of age) are currently held in Israeli detention. As witnesses to the Israeli military's search and arrest operations, children are seriously affected, suffering clear signs of distress such as panic attacks and recurrent fears, while also being deprived of a parent, commonly their father and the family breadwinner.
Restrictions on movement The number of physical roadblocks and checkpoints in the West Bank increased to 550 in February (from 528 in January). There were also additional temporary restrictions, such as age and residence. For example, between 7-20 February "flying checkpoints" around Nablus, Tulkarem and Jenin saw Palestinian men aged between 16-35 barred from crossing checkpoints and from travelling south.
Palestinian fisheries Palestinian living standards and food security continues to seriously decline due to Israeli closure policies, which isolate markets and restrict movement of goods and people. The fishing industry in Gaza has been heavily affected. Between 26 June and 24 October 2006 the Israeli authorities banned all fishing of the Gaza coastline following the capture of an Israeli solider on 25 June 2006 by Palestinian militants. Over 35,000 people who rely on fishing for their livelihoods are now recipients of food aid. Gaza's fishing zones have diminished from a 20 nautical mile (nm) limit as agreed in the 1995 Oslo Accords, to 12nm in the 2002 Bertini Accord and then to 6nm as enforced by the Israeli navy since October 2006. This is in addition to sea exclusion zones of 2km on the southern border with Egypt, and 3km on the northern border with Israel. Overfishing and the depletion of fish stocks is a major threat. REGIONAL OVERVIEW West Bank & East Jerusalem Nablus - Seventy Palestinians were arrested, with 58 later released, by the Israeli military in operation 'Hot Winter', 25-28 February, which saw 20,000 residents of the Old City of Nablus placed under curfew while the Israeli army conducted house-to-house searches for seven wanted Palestinians. Two Palestinian schools were used as detention and interrogation centres by the Israeli military, all other schools and the two universities were closed, and checkpoints set up outside three local hospitals which checked all incoming and outgoing vehicles, ambulances, patients and visitors. One Palestinian was killed, 24 injured, 284 houses and shops damaged, and 3000 people required emergency rations during the curfew. Old City of Jerusalem - Palestinian men under the age of 45 have been restricted from entering the Old City since 17 February 2006. These restrictions were rarely lifted for Muslim worshippers to access the Al-Aqsa Mosque for Friday prayers and during the Holy Month of Ramadan. Four checkpoints - Qalandiya, Shufat, Ras Abu Sbeitan and Gilo - control Palestinian access to East Jerusalem. Even a valid Israeli permit to enter and work in East Jerusalem and Israel did not guarantee free access. Gaza Strip Internal violence - Inter-factional violence between Hamas and Fatah activists has killed 86 Palestinians, including 11 children, and injured 486 people since the start of 2007. This internal violence has almost ceased since the signing of the Mecca Accord on 8 February, and Gazans have been largely able to resume their daily lives. However, law and order has not been fully restored, with armed family feuds and community disputes continuing throughout the Gaza Strip, including incidences of honor-related crimes against women and girls, and internet cafes and their owners targeted with violence. Isolation from the world - Control of the Gaza Strip's only international crossing point, Rafah on the border with Egypt, which was formerly overseen by the European Border Assistance Mission (EU BAM) following the November 2005 Agreement on Movement and Access (AMA), has been resumed by the Israeli authorities since June 2006. The border was open only six days in February for Palestinian access, significantly affecting the movement of Palestinian businesspeople and patients referred for medical treatment abroad. Recent published reports
Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs |
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