Mar 22 2007
One-third of Palestinians ‘food insecure’
Special Features
By MWC News   

Ben Heine / MWC NEWS
Ben Heine / MWC NEWS
One-third of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are food insecure, according to a report by the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

About 34 percent of Palestinians cannot afford a balanced meal and another 12 percent are at risk of reaching this state, the organisations found in a Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Assessment published this month. Most affected is the Gaza Strip, where 51 percent of the population suffers from food insecurity.

“The poorest families are now living a meagre existence totally reliant on assistance, with no electricity or heating and eating food prepared with water from bad sources,” according to a statement by Arnold Vercken, the WFP country director for the occupied Palestinian territories (oPt).

But an Israeli spokesperson said Palestinian authorities should take more responsibility.

“The problem is there is a government that does not recognise Israel or the agreements that constitute the relationship between us and the Palestinians,” said Shlomo Dror, spokesman for the Government Coordination Unit, which covers the humanitarian situation in Gaza and the West Bank.

“Why don’t the Palestinians help themselves? They have enough money to arm themselves to the teeth so why don’t they use it for the benefit of their people?”

He added that Israeli nutritionists had suggested ways to include more vitamins in UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and WFP food packages to ensure Palestinian children had a better diet.

The new FAO/WFP Crop and Food Security Vulnerability Assessment, last conducted in 2003, will help the UN food agency design beneficiary profiles to fine-tune food aid distribution.

"The poorest families are now living a meagre existence totally reliant on assistance, with no electricity or heating and eating food prepared with water from bad sources."

Poverty is rising in the West Bank and Gaza because of international sanctions, compounded by Israeli restrictions on the movement of Palestinian goods and labour related to security concerns. The Palestinian Authority (PA) cannot pay its civil servants because the international community has refused to fund the PA unless the Palestinian government, which includes Hamas, recognises Israel and renounces violence.

Some PA salaries are being paid through a Temporary International Mechanism supported by the European Commission. About 80 percent of Gazans receive aid from WFP or UNRWA.

“Without a political resolution - and particularly removal of restrictions on movement - improvement in the humanitarian situation is unlikely and millions will remain dependent on assistance,” noted the FAO/WFP report. “A substantive injection of aid and social transfers has partially cushioned the declining humanitarian situation in Palestine, but aid cannot fully compensate for the loss of self-reliance.”

Belt-tightening

According to the WFP and FAO, 84 percent of Gazans and 60 percent of West Bankers have reduced their spending. Family and friends have kept food on Palestinian tables, but many now have nothing left to share, the report found.

“Solidarity has reached its limits. Families are becoming increasingly dependent on food aid,” said WFP spokeswoman Kirstie Campbell in Gaza.

Households are using several coping mechanisms such as reducing food portions; eating only one meal a day; buying lower-quality food; and eating less fruit, vegetables and fresh meat. Other means to maintain living standards include taking loans from family, friends and local merchants and selling assets such as land and jewellery.

"In our house … we rarely bring [red meat] home. I bake my own bread to save money to buy gas for cooking and I never give my children money any more."

“No one knows what happens behind doors, but I can tell you that in our house … we rarely bring [red meat] home,” the report quoted the head of a household in Burqeen in the West Bank Jenin Governorate as saying. “I bake my own bread to save money to buy gas for cooking and I never give my children money any more - not even one shekel [coin] to buy sweets or [Coca-Cola].”

An unchanging diet and reliance on carbohydrates as the bulk food intake will affect the wellbeing of the population, 46 percent of whom are children, according to UN agencies. A nutrition survey found that chronic malnutrition is rising steadily. Iron deficiency (anaemia) is estimated to affect one-third of women and children. More than 22 percent of children aged between one and five had a vitamin A deficiency - levels higher than 20 percent are considered a severe public health problem.

Lack of work

Fewer Gazans have been able to enter Israel for work since the beginning of the Al Aqsa intifada in 2000, leaving hundreds of thousands of Gazans unemployed. A senior Israeli Ministry of Defence official told IRIN on condition of anonymity that no Gazans were allowed to work in Israel and he thought it highly unlikely that would change during 2007.

Many men have not been able to find reliable long-term work inside Gaza to replace the construction or agricultural jobs they had in Israel. A small number earn food from the WFP by working on community projects in Gaza, such as road cleaning.

Fishing and farming restricted

The Israeli human rights organisation B’tselem said the Israeli military had forbidden the movement of fishing boats off the Gazan coast.

“The prohibition has seriously harmed the fishing sector, which provides a livelihood for many residents of the Strip. Fishermen who violate the prohibition risk being shot at by Israeli navy craft,” said Antigona Ashkar, a researcher at B'tselem.

Restrictions on movement have also affected farmers' access to their land in the West Bank, which in turn has affected food security. “In the old days, we used to cultivate our lands quite far from the centre of town. Now, because we cannot reach these lands, some of us are cultivating whatever lands we have next to our homes … We plant lands with vegetables that we use for our own consumption,” a farmer from Kufr Ni’ma in the Ramallah Governorate was quoted as saying in the report.

Productive capacity in oPt is likely to be permanently restricted not only through limitations on access to land and water, but by the poor quality of water sources and lack of inputs, according to the report.

The Palestinians' livelihoods need to be protected, said the WFP and FAO, suggesting employment schemes, development of micro enterprises, and supporting Palestinian production of poultry, meat, vegetables and olive oil. Food-for-work, school feeding and food-for-training should be encouraged.

© IRIN

Recommend this article...




Did you enjoy this article? Please bookmark it onto:
Digg!Reddit!Del.icio.us!Newsvine!Blogmarks!Yahoo!

Quote this article on your site | Views: 5165

Comments (5)
RSS comments
1. 22-03-2007 18:45
Feeding the Palestinians
If the billions of dollars given to the Palestinians was spent on food instead of weapons and explosives, the people might then get enough to eat.
Guest
2. 23-03-2007 15:29
re=
Billions???? 
 
From whom? And that's the justification for Israel to destroy their economy?
Guest
Dave
3. 18-07-2007 19:27
re=
From the rest of the Muslim world. From those rich oil-filled countries. And they destroyed their own economy. Do they even HAVE an economy? Trading in... guns? TNT? More guns?
Guest
Jacob
4. 19-07-2007 09:45
re=
Quote:
 
 
Do they even HAVE an economy?

 
 
Not any more. Thanks to Israel wall, most their lands is now in the other side.
Guest
Shahram
5. 12-12-2007 19:56
What?
Sorry, but is it idiot day today? I'm not usually blunt, but get a clue, ya'll. 
 
How about if Canada just decided to come down south a bit and settle in with their schools, their workplaces, their slang expression, etc. 
 
How about if they tore down your homes to do this? hmm? 
 
Then, how about when they begin building a huge wall to separate what was once your neighborhood from what is now their neighborhood? 
 
Next, how about if you would have to negociate to get proper water and other utilities, (those which you used to have and have been paying for the construction of and maintenence of for years) from a new source? Where will the new source come from? Who will be able to ensure loan payment, knowing those Canadians will take over anything you soundly build? 
 
Are we stupid or what?
Guest
isittoday@yahoo.conNOSPAM! ">moonlitetwine

Write Comment
  • Please keep the topic of messages relevant to the subject of the article.
  • Personal verbal attacks will be deleted.
  • Please don't use comments to plug your web site. Such material will be removed.
  • Just ensure to *Refresh* your browser for a new security code to be displayed prior to clicking on the 'Send' button.
  • Keep in mind that the above process only applies if you simply entered the wrong security code.
Name:
E-mail
Homepage
Title:
BBCode:Web AddressEmail AddressBold TextItalic TextUnderlined TextQuoteCodeOpen ListList ItemClose List
Comment:

Code:* Code
I wish to be contacted by email regarding additional comments

Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.4.4


Tags:  Palestinians Gaza Strip World Food Programm United Nations