Los Angeles Times

Easing of Gaza sanctions expected

An Israeli official calls Hamas deal ‘virtually done.’ Move will aid teetering economy.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y and Hana Salah

JERUSALEM — After over a month of suffocatin­g sanctions that left many Gazans on the brink of economic collapse, relief may be on its way.

Israel’s Defense Ministry said Monday that two days of “complete quiet” on its border with Gaza have led Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman to consider easing the closure it imposed on the sole commercial entryway into the Gaza Strip on July 9.

A senior Israeli official familiar with the negotiatio­ns who was not authorized to speak publicly told The Times that the deal with Hamas, the Islamist militia that rules the Gaza Strip, is “virtually done.”

Also Monday, Nickolay Mladenov, the United Nations special coordinato­r for the Middle East peace process, announced two new programs to help Gaza. One will provide 4,400 new shortterm jobs; the other will help 200,000 “extremely poor Palestinia­ns” buy food for the next six weeks.

For Gazans of every social class, the relief can’t come soon enough.

At nightfall Sunday, Abu Karam Bourno, 60, sat on the step of his darkened electronic­s shop and contemplat­ed an evening without a single customer. Traffic was busy on Omar Mukhtar Street, one of Gaza’s liveliest thoroughfa­res, but many shops appeared to be empty.

Gaza has been partially blockaded by Israel and Egypt since Hamas took over the territory in 2007. More recently, Israel shut down any possibilit­y of importing or exporting consumer goods. The extreme measure was taken after months of sometimes violent protests at the border and as Gazans launched dozens of flaming kites and balloons into Israel, incinerati­ng acres of agricultur­al fields.

On Wednesday and Thursday, about 200 rockets were launched into Israel from Gaza, prompting Israel to respond with a similarly heavy bombardmen­t. On Friday, three Palestinia­ns were killed by Israeli fire during border demonstrat­ions.

But on Monday, Israel said that it had detected only one blaze and that it was “not caused by a balloon.”

Gaza business owners have become very adaptable over almost a dozen years of limitation­s on their ability to engage in trade freely and move outside the Strip. But the last year has been brutal.

In January, President Trump announced the United States would withhold its usual contributi­on to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which runs schools and provides food, medical care and employment for thousands of Palestinia­ns across the Middle East.

In April, UNRWA head Pierre Kraehenbue­hl said the U.S. paid only $60 million of a promised $365 million for the year, leaving a gaping shortfall for the neediest Gazans.

In July, Israel closed the Kerem Shalom crossing, where hundreds of trucks loaded with goods usually rumble daily in and out of Gaza, and limited the ability of Gazans to fish off the Mediterran­ean coast. It made an exception for humanitari­an necessitie­s such as food and medicine.

Even the supply of fuel and gas has been intermitte­ntly halted.

Bourno’s Lamar laptop shop supports a family of seven, including Karam, his 34-year-old son, who is single and works in the store. In recent weeks, they started stocking cellphones and phone accessorie­s and offering telephone repair services for clients who could no longer afford to buy the few laptops still on the shelves.

On Saturday, the Bournos scrambled and briskly tried to fix the phones of people who couldn’t afford to upgrade or who couldn’t find new devices to replace broken ones.

All the shops along Omar Mukhtar Street have been hurt. Gazans who managed to thrive despite the blockade and the cutbacks to UNRWA also had to contend with sanctions imposed by the Palestinia­n Authority. To punish its rival faction, Hamas, the authority slashed the salaries of government employees and imposed cutbacks on the supply of electricit­y.

On Sunday, few electronic­s shops had light. On the sidewalk in front of the Bournos’ store, a young man tried to sell shirts he’d folded on a sheet on the pavement. Clothing shops, mini-marts and household appliances, perfumerie­s — all showed signs of the inability of Gazans to buy.

Faced with over a month of stasis, the elder Bourno said: “’I can’t further reduce my level of income. We’re all used to a certain standard of living, and now I sometimes request loans, as it is the only way I’ve found to move ahead with life until economic conditions improve.”

Osama Nofal, director of planning and policy at Hamas’ Ministry of National Economy, said in an interview that 75% of Gaza’s 650 constructi­on-sector factories have been shuttered since July 9 and that an additional 15% are operating at less than half capacity.

“Gaza’s economy is on the verge of collapse,” Ali Hayek, chairman of the Palestinia­n Businessme­n Assn. in the territory, said last week. “Commercial and financial activities has stopped almost completely since Israel’s decisions to tighten the siege on the Gaza Strip.”

He said the recent sanctions had cost 75,000 people their jobs, “an unpreceden­ted rate of unemployme­nt and poverty, even in the Gaza Strip.”

Tahseen Saqqa, general manager for marketing at the Gaza Ministry of Agricultur­e, said the halt in fruit and vegetable exports was costing the enclave about $100,000 in daily losses.

“Israel is preventing the export of potatoes, tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplants, zucchinis, cauliflowe­rs, grapes, all of which are in season now,” he said.

Even if Israel loosens the barrier to commercial exchange and money flows in from new internatio­nal aid programs, not everyone believes that Gaza will be able to recoup its losses.

If Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “agreed to open all crossings and allow all goods to enter … you won’t feel any economic improvemen­t,” said Mohammed Abu Jayyab, editor in chief of the economic newspaper Eqtisadiah. “The disease is the absence of money and liquidity in the hands of Gazan citizens and in the private sector. Without an inflow of money and regular disburseme­nt of salaries, nothing will have a significan­t effect on the lives of people in Gaza.”

 ?? Hazem Bader AFP/Getty Images ?? PALESTINIA­N REFUGEES and Bedouins receive medical aid from the U.N. Relief and Works Agency in the West Bank. In the Gaza Strip, a cut in U.S. funding to the agency and sanctions imposed by Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority have devastated the economy.
Hazem Bader AFP/Getty Images PALESTINIA­N REFUGEES and Bedouins receive medical aid from the U.N. Relief and Works Agency in the West Bank. In the Gaza Strip, a cut in U.S. funding to the agency and sanctions imposed by Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority have devastated the economy.

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