GAZA: Reconstruction of Gaza after last month’s fighting between Israel and Hamas is being held up by a dispute over the fate of Israelis held by the resistance Palestinian group and a lack of clarity over how to prevent it from accessing aid funds, officials say.
The Gaza government says 2,200 homes were destroyed and 37,000 damaged by Israeli shelling during the 11 days. Rebuilding those dwellings and the wider Gaza infrastructure will cost some $500 million, the government says.
Egypt and Qatar, which helped broker a May 21 truce, have pledged $500 million each for reconstruction in the Palestinian enclave, two-thirds of whose 2 million residents rely on aid.
However, Israel says that can proceed only if it makes headway in efforts to recover two soldiers missing in action in a 2014 Gaza war as well as two civilians who slipped separately into the enclave.
“It’s reconstruction in exchange for progress on the missing,” a senior Israeli official told Reuters, declining to specify what Israel – which has declared the two missing soldiers dead – would consider “progress.”
Hamas says talks about them must be based on a swap for Palestinians imprisoned in Israel, not aid.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has long opposed releasing jailed Palestinians. According to the Commission on Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs, a local nongovernmental organization (NGO), some 1 million Palestinians have been arrested by Israeli forces since the 1967 Middle East war.
“Around 17,000 women and girls and 50,000 children were among those detained,” the NGO said in the statement, adding that more than 54,000 administrative detention orders have been recorded since 1967. The policy of administrative detention allows Israeli authorities to extend the detention of a prisoner without charge or trial.
“A total of 226 detainees have died inside Israeli prisons since 1967,” it asserted, highlighting that all those detained experienced “some form of physical or psychological torture, moral abuse and cruel treatment.”
Around 4,500 Palestinians are believed to be held in Israeli prisons, including 41 women, 140 minors and 440 administrative detainees, according to data compiled by organizations on the rights of prisoners. – Agencies