Arab News

Palestinia­n families face another difficult Ramadan as aid funding dips

- Hazem Balousha Gaza City

For the second year running, Hassan Abu Al-Amrain has missed out on relief aid for his family during the month of Ramadan.

There has been a significan­t drop in the amount of funding provided to local civil humanitari­an charities due to the measures imposed to curb the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

Abu Al-Amrain, 47, who lives in Gaza City said: “For the second year, the month of Ramadan has been the most difficult for us. We would usually wait for supplies of goods and food provided by charitable associatio­ns because I am unable to buy them.”

Anxiety dominates Abu Al-Amrain, who suffers from illnesses that have kept him out of work for 20 years. “The situation is very difficult, and I do not know how I will provide my family’s needs,” he told Arab News.

More than two-thirds of the Gaza Strip’s population of some 2 million people suffers from poverty or extreme poverty, according to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).

Local statistics show that the unemployme­nt rate was 43 percent before the pandemic, but it has now exceeded 50 percent, with heads of families losing their jobs.

For needy families, the month of Ramadan is an opportunit­y to receive financial donations and food aid, which help them endure the hardships of life in Gaza, which has been deteriorat­ing over the past 15 years as a result of the Israeli blockade and internal division. “COVID-19 deprived us of the bounties of the month of Ramadan. In previous years, we did not need aid for months after the end of Ramadan,” said Abu Al-Amrain.

Abu Al-Amrain lives with his wife Hala, 35, and their four children in a small and dilapidate­d house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborho­od, north of Gaza City.

The situation is very difficult, and I do not know how I will provide my family’s needs.

Abu Al-Amrain

Gaza resident

“For many years, we have not tasted fresh meat except during Ramadan, with charitable assistance,” Hala said, adding: “We do not have the ability to buy it.”

In Gaza, a kilo of fresh beef is sold for 50 shekels ($14). According to UNRWA data, about 80 percent of the population depends on humanitari­an aid.

Due to a weak diet with little protein and vitamins, Hala suffers from an imbalance in his white and red blood cells, which causes dizziness and a rise in body temperatur­e.

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