Chattanooga Times Free Press

Palestinia­ns hungry after UN cuts aid

- BY JULIA FRANKEL

JENIN, West Bank — Except for a small bag of lentils and the orange juice she reserves for guests, there is no food in Ashwaq Abu al-Wafa’s house in the northern West Bank city of Jenin.

Ever since the U.N. cut her food aid in June, she has fallen behind on rent. All her money now goes to feeding her three children, she said.

“The fridge is empty,” alWafa said from her apartment on Thursday. “I can barely hold all of this stress in my heart.”

Thousands of families like al-Wafa’s across the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip go through the day not sure where they will get their next meal now that the World Food Program has halted aid to 200,000 people, 60% of beneficiar­ies, its largest-ever cut in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

The agency has made cuts across the world, from war-torn Yemen to West Africa, a region gripped by its worst hunger crisis in years.

The WFP’s deputy executive director, Carl Skau, announced last week that the agency has raised just $5 billion of the $20 billion it needs to operate fully, forcing it to suspend aid to 38 of its 86 countries where it operates.

Zekriat Karram, who also lives in Jenin, said her family has survived by racking up debt at local groceries. Now, shopkeeper­s demand payback. When Karram was recently hospitaliz­ed, her six children, ranging in age from 3 to 16, scraped together meals of olives and bread.

The cuts come at a particular­ly bad time for Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank, which is witnessing a surge in violence unseen in nearly two decades.

Al-Wafa and Karram’s homes have smashed doors and cracked windows, scars from recent stepped-up military raids into the flashpoint city, the latest of which marked the most intense in nearly two decades and left 12 Palestinia­ns and one Israeli soldier dead. Israel says the raids are meant to thwart future attacks.

Al-Wafa’s 14-year-old son, Ammar, was shot in the chest during a January raid, she said, adding to her family’s expenses and squeezing their food budget. Her husband’s income depends on whether he can pass through Israeli military checkpoint­s to take produce into Jenin. When the Israeli army closes the roads, his work dries up and his family skips meals.

“Food insecurity here is a symptom of something larger,” said Samer Abdeljaber, WFP country director for the Palestinia­n territorie­s. “Conflict, access and movement restrictio­ns and the barriers to everyday life have led to soaring unemployme­nt and poverty.”

The WFP said it suspended aid to those who could earn additional income or get other assistance, like the Palestinia­n Authority’s cash transfer program for poor families.

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