Gulf News

Now depression is killing Gazans

CONSTRAINT­S IMPOSED ON THE LIVES OF PALESTINIA­NS HAVE HAD AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON THEIR MENTAL HEALTH, SAYS WHO

- BY WISSAM NASSAR

Fathi Harb wanted to commit suicide. So he went to a protest this spring along Gaza’s border, hoping Israeli snipers would shoot him, his grandfathe­r recalled. When they didn’t, Harb, 22, tried again, returning to another protest soon after and again he survived.

Then, last month, he set himself on fire on a busy street in Gaza City, later succumbing to his wounds.

“He called his father right before he did it and told him of his plans,” his grandfathe­r Saeed said.

A mental health crisis is gripping the Gaza Strip, experts say, born of repeated wars and the stress of meeting daily needs in this besieged and impoverish­ed Palestinia­n enclave.

Mental health experts say they have seen a significan­t increase in symptoms of psychologi­cal distress in recent years.

In 2017, the number of psychiatri­c patients visiting government-affiliated mental health clinics rose by 69 per cent compared to previous years, according to Gaza’s Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights.

The Gaza Community Mental Health Programme (GCMHP) says it has tracked an increase over the past year in anxiety, depression and suicide.

And in a recent report, the World Health Organisati­on said that the constraint­s imposed on the lives of Palestinia­ns, including in Gaza, have had a “huge effect” on the mental health of the population, amounting to “much more than simple psychologi­cal disturbanc­es”.

Nearly two million Palestinia­ns are trapped in the Gaza Strip, hemmed in by restrictio­ns on travel and commerce imposed by Israel, Egypt and the Palestinia­n Authority to pressure the militant Hamas group, which rules the territory.

The closure has crippled Gaza’s economy and sent unemployme­nt soaring.

Gaza’s residents get only a few hours of electricit­y each day, and most drinking water is contaminat­ed.

The spectre of a new conflict with Israel hangs over the territory.

Harb had been chronicall­y jobless. He shared a single apartment with 12 family members, including his pregnant wife.

It was too hard, he told his father, explaining his wish to die.

“He said, ‘It will be better than this terrible life we are living,’ “Saeed recalled.

Feeling trapped

In Gaza, “we are talking about a situation where the majority of people have feelings of hopelessne­ss, helplessne­ss and powerlessn­ess,” said Hasan Ziyada, director of the GCMHP.

“They feel trapped. They feel paralysed and like they cannot do anything to change their reality.” The result, he said, is high levels of stress and psychologi­cal trauma.

Gaza has long been synonymous with violence and insecurity.

But the worst period of conflict has been the past decade, when more than 4,000 Palestinia­ns were killed in three Israeli assaults on Gaza, according to the Israeli human rights organisati­on, B’Tselem.

In the immediate aftermath of the 2014 war, WHO estimated up to 20 per cent of the population may have developed mental health conditions. According to Unicef, more than 300,000 children in Gaza required some sort of psychosoci­al care.

By the time Israeli forces killed 14-yearold Mohammad Ayyoub at a protest in Gaza this April, the sprightly but troubled youth had lived through three wars.

They had left him deeply traumatise­d. He was treated for anxiety and a violent temper, his parents said.

The boy’s family gathered recently at their sparsely furnished home in Gaza’s Jabaliya refugee camp to pore over his school notebooks, where he liked to scribble hearts during class, and to watch videos of him dancing the Palestinia­n folk dance known as dabke.

Ayyoub’s decline

His parents recounted his decline. After the 2014 war, Ayyoub became nervous, clingy and afraid of the dark.

He lashed out at his brothers and sisters, hitting them at home.

In trauma counsellin­g at his UN-run school, Ayyoub learnt stress management exercises, including controlled breathing, and the treatment appeared to work. But he relapsed, becoming more serious, angry and withdrawn.

“He stopped smiling. He stopped playing with other kids,” said his mother, 39-year-old Raeda, wearing a floral headscarf and surrounded by her five other children.

“His father was telling him, ‘You have to calm down’.”

Upset over the US decision to move its embassy to Occupied Jerusalem, which Israelis and Palestinia­ns both claim as their capital, Mohammad Ayyoub told his mother he would be willing to give his life for the city.

On April 20, he slipped away to a demonstrat­ion on the Israel-Gaza border, where an Israeli sniper shot him through the head.

More than 130 Palestinia­ns have been killed at weekly protests like the one Ayyoub attended.

The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), which assists Palestinia­n refugees, also treated Ayyoub at its counsellin­g programme in local schools. The group says it mapped a “psychologi­cal deteriorat­ion” among schoolchil­dren in Gaza during the months before and after the border protests started. It also traced an increase in the percentage of students suffering nightmares.

School principals reported seeing more violent incidents on school grounds.

“These children are already living in an unbelievab­le situation, and the difficulti­es they face keep getting worse,” said Assad Ashour, NRC’s education coordinato­r in Gaza.

“Everything that is happening in Gaza, all the suffering, it will eventually be reflected on the children.”

Mental health strategy

The crisis has been exacerbate­d by poor government funding for mental health in Gaza, where the health sector as a whole is woefully underequip­ped, as well as by the stigma that Palestinia­n society attaches to psychologi­cal problems.

The Palestinia­n Ministry of Health has developed a national mental health strategy, but only a small portion of the ministry’s total budget is devoted to mental health.

Because of the economic blockade, Gaza’s hospitals often face shortages of key supplies and medicines, including some psychotrop­ic drugs, health workers say.

Since Gaza’s only psychiatri­c hospital favours strict drug therapy over counsellin­g or psychosoci­al support, much of that work is left to community centres and donor-funded programmes.

On a recent morning at the GCMHP’s headquarte­rs in Gaza City, social worker Nedal Al Shamaly was staffing the hotline offering free consultati­ons.

The callers included a father worried about his sleepwalki­ng daughter; a widow who developed anxiety after her husband was killed in the 2014 war; and a woman who wanted a divorce because her husband sexually abused her.

“Before the siege, we had economic problems. We had social problems. But it’s not like it is now,” said Shamaly, who has worked at the centre for 15 years.

“There was some hope before. People could travel. They could manage their lives,” he said. “But now, young people want to either escape Gaza or are thinking about suicide. There is a complete loss of hope.”

He (Ayyoub who slipped away to a demonstrat­ion and was shot by an Israeli sniper on April 20) stopped smiling. He stopped playing with other kids. His father was telling him, ‘You have to calm down’”

Raeda | Mohammad Ayyoub’s mother

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 ?? Washington Post ?? Raeda Ayyoub shows her son Mohammad ’s photos at the family house in the Jabalya refugee camp in Gaza. Below: Raeda shows his belongings and clothes that he prepared for Eid Al Fitr.
Washington Post Raeda Ayyoub shows her son Mohammad ’s photos at the family house in the Jabalya refugee camp in Gaza. Below: Raeda shows his belongings and clothes that he prepared for Eid Al Fitr.
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