The Borneo Post

West Bank economy in tatters as Gaza war rages

- Palestinia­n

In the occupied West Bank, Hafeth Ghazawneh waits in quiet frustratio­n for customers to visit his falafel stall, which has been deserted since the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel.

His breakfast and lunch offerings were popular with craftsmen from workshops near Al-Bireh, the twin city of Ramallah, before the IsraelHama­s war broke out.

“Now they’re bringing their meals from home because the situation is so difficult,” Ghazawneh tells AFP, fearing he will have to shut up shop if the war in the Gaza Strip continues.

Ghazawneh says his income has plummeted from around 7,000 shekels ($1,850) per month to just 2,000 ($530).

His worsening situation reflects the current status of the West Bank economy, which is in tatters as the war in Gaza rages.

The conflict erupted after Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on October 7, resulting in the deaths of around 1,140 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on the latest Israeli figures.

Israel’s blistering retaliatio­n has killed at least 24,448 people, around 70 per cent of them women, children and adolescent­s, according to the Hamas government’s health ministry in Gaza.

The World Bank has estimated the West Bank’s GDP could fall by six per cent this year, while the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on said 32 per cent of jobs have already been lost.

The unemployme­nt rate has

skyrockete­d to 30 per cent, up from 14 per cent before the war, according to Taher al-Labadi, a researcher at the French Institute for the Near East (Ifpo).

Israel has also withdrawn 130,000 work permits from Palestinia­ns in the West Bank, leaving many with no source of income.

The three million Palestinia­ns living in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, cannot travel to Israel without a permit.

Bishara Jubran, manager of a household products and cosmetics factory in Ramallah, considers himself lucky because he has been able to keep all 70 of his employees on the books.

But his business has stopped producing soaps made from Dead Sea ingredient­s which he used to sell to hotels.

As the war rages and visitors stay away, he estimates his losses at $200,000 last year.

He keeps his factory afloat by selling washing powder and other household products on the Palestinia­n market.

But none of his goods are allowed into Gaza, a key market that used to make up 20 per cent of his sales.

In the West Bank, transport costs have increased because of a growing number of checkpoint­s and the sealing off of certain towns by the Israeli army, Bishara says.

“Many times the truck leaves and it takes them like four or five hours to reach... the north in Nablus to find out that he cannot enter the city. So he just comes back,” he says.

Now he makes a delivery every two or three days, down from two a day before the war.

Such factors have led to a contractio­n of the economy, which is now operating at 50 per cent of its capacity, according to Abdo Idris, president of the Palestinia­n Chamber of Commerce.

The Palestinia­n economy was already “asphyxiate­d” and highly dependent on Israel before the war, researcher Labadi says.

Under the Oslo Accords of

the 1990s, it was agreed that a political status quo would be maintained and Palestinia­ns were promised economic developmen­t.

But this status quo was undermined by Israel’s “colonisati­on of the West Bank”, Labadi says, lamenting that Palestinia­n economic developmen­t “did not take place”.

As a result, in times of crisis, the increasing­ly fragile Palestinia­n economy finds itself “deprived of all its resources and with a very limited capacity for resilience”, he says.

Israel controls the borders of the West Bank and collects taxes on Palestinia­n products, which it must then pass on to the

Palestinia­n Authority.

But since October 7, those taxes have not been paid.

As of December, Israel had not paid two billion shekels in taxes imposed on Palestinia­n products, according to the Palestinia­n finance ministry.

The Palestinia­n Authority has struggled to pay public servants since the taxes were withheld.

Civil servants told AFP their salaries for December have still not been paid.

In October, they received 50 per cent of their wages, and 65 per cent in November.

“The fear of the unknown is killing us,” Jubran says. “We don’t know if we’ll be able to go to work tomorrow.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Ghazawneh waits for customers to visit his falafel stall in the occupied West Bank city of Al-Bireh, deserted since the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel and the war that followed between Israel and the Palestinia­n militant group.
— AFP photos Ghazawneh waits for customers to visit his falafel stall in the occupied West Bank city of Al-Bireh, deserted since the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel and the war that followed between Israel and the Palestinia­n militant group.
 ?? ?? An employee works in Bishara Jubran’s household products and cosmetics factory in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, who was able to keep his factory afloat by selling washing powder and other household products on the Palestinia­n market.
An employee works in Bishara Jubran’s household products and cosmetics factory in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, who was able to keep his factory afloat by selling washing powder and other household products on the Palestinia­n market.

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