Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
The long road to rebuilding Gaza
The long road to rebuilding Gaza
Jan 20, 2026 8:36 AM

  More than two years after the 2014 war, displaced citizens are still struggling to survive.

  Samia Qudaih and her husband, Mohammed Baraka, have been struggling to survive with their son and five daughters in the al-Zanah area of Gaza, east of Khan Younis, for the past two years. In preparation for winter, they covered their caravan with nylon.

  "We're set to receive a new hardship," Baraka told Al Jazeera. "We are facing the worst of times. We do not know if we are going to wake up safe, or just become a news headline after we die."

  Hundreds of families in Gaza still live in caravans, a temporary solution to the mass displacement that followed the 2014 war. Many have no idea when they will be able to leave the caravans and rebuild their destroyed homes - a situation for which they blame Israel and Egypt, who have blockaded Gaza for the past decade, and the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority.

  According to the United Nations, the war killed more than 2,000 Palestinians, destroyed thousands of homes in Gaza and ravaged more than 70 percent of the territory's infrastructure.

  The World Bank, which has been monitoring international pledges made at the Cairo conference towards the reconstruction of Gaza, says that two years after the war, less than half of Gaza's completely destroyed homes have been totally or partially reconstructed. Thousands of families have yet to receive reconstruction funds.

  "Reconstruction in Gaza has stumbled," acknowledged Adnan Abu Hasna, a spokesperson for the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). "Unfortunately, the countries who pledged billions to rebuilding the Gaza Strip have not made good on their promises."

  In total, international donors pledged $3.5bn towards rebuilding Gaza at the 2014 Cairo conference. As of this summer, just 46 percent of that support had been disbursed.

  If donors were to fulfil all of their pledges immediately, Gaza could be rebuilt within the next year, said Abu Hasna. But pledges have been difficult to secure, with donor attention diverted by a variety of regional conflicts in Syria, Libya, Yemen and Iraq.

  "Delay in reconstruction has not only affected people's lives, but it is also affecting [the economy]," he said.

  UNRWA has spent $4m to temporarily house nearly 9,000 families who lost their homes in the 2014 war. "If we invested this money, we would have rebuilt 800 homes," Abu Hasna said.

  "We are worried to see more money, millions of dollars, going for rent instead [of reconstruction] if the situation persists."

  The Israeli siege of Gaza has been a significant factor in the delayed reconstruction, as Israel monitors and controls all building materials entering the territory, citing a need to ensure these materials are not diverted to Hamas fighters. Civilians must obtain a series of permissions in order to rebuild their homes, dragging the process out for years. In some cases, Israel has refused to approve the rebuilding of homes, UNRWA said.

  Internal divisions between the Palestinian factions of Hamas and Fatah have also negatively affected reconstruction.

  "Any solution for the reconstruction will depend on reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas, and when the Palestinian Authority reassumes control of Gaza," Basel Nasser, a Gaza-based official with the UN Development Programme, told Al Jazeera. "The best way to bring stability to their lives is by resolving the political situation."

  The convoluted political situation has also frustrated donors, who are wary to liaise with a divided Palestinian leadership, observers say.

  In the meantime, residents of Gaza remain on the precipice, staring at an uncertain future.

  Hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza were rendered permanently disabled as a result of the war, and their suffering over the past two years has been unique. Many of the rebuilt structures lack facilities for disabled people, making it difficult for them to resume their daily lives, according to the Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees.

  Mohammed Bardaa, who lost a leg, an arm and an eye to Israeli shelling years before the 2014 war, has been waiting with his family for funds to rebuild their home in the devastated Shujayea neighborhood. So far, he has received just enough money to rebuild the exterior walls. In the meantime, he has been living in cramped quarters with his parents.

  "Unfortunately, the UNDP did not look into my special case," Bardaa told Al Jazeera, "and they have left me waiting a long time."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A Palestinian woman looks through her dwelling covered with plastic sheet in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, December 20, 2016. Reuters

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
The Dronification of Planet Earth
  It’s now commonly estimated that more than 50 nations have drones, are making plans to develop them, or are at least planning to buy them from those who do produce them. In other words, the future global skies are going to be a busy -- and increasingly dangerous -- place....
US trafficking report reveals 'modern slavery' toll
  More than 42,000 adults and children were found in forced prostitution, labor, slavery or armed conflict in 2011, a US government report has found.   Some 9,000 more victims were identified around the world than in 2010, the state department report said.   But the number is just a fraction of the...
West Speaks with a Forked Tongue on the Arab Spring
  By Haroon Siddiqui   We profess fidelity to democracy, especially in the Arab world. But our commitment seems to come with the caveat that the will of the people is acceptable only if it confirms our prejudices. If not — as in Egyptians’ choice of the Muslim Brotherhood for both parliament...
NATO ‘pullout’ won’t actually remove troops from Afghanistan
  Following in the rich history of fake endings to wars during the Obama Administration’s first term, the US and other NATO member nations are loudly hyping their endorsement of a transition pact, which is being presented as an “irreversible pullout” of occupation forces.   “We are now unified to responsibly wind...
Palestinian hunger strikes: Media missing in action
  Can anyone doubt that if there were more than 1,500 prisoners engaged in a hunger strike in any country in the world other than Palestine, the media in the West would be obsessed with the story? Such an obsession would, of course, be greatest if such a phenomenon were to...
Rising prices ignite Sudan street protests
  In a small roadside market in Khartoum, Ali is leaning across the piles of neatly folded trousers he is selling, trying to keep the attention of his one potential customer. It is a difficult job, especially once he tells the man the price. The cost of the trousers he is...
Srebrenica: A town still divided
  Mina Subasic slowly walks with a cane into the missing persons' identification center in Tuzla, northern Bosnia and Herzegovina. On the table in front of her is a handful of bones. Her face frozen with pain, Subasic listens to a forensic expert who explains why it would be good if...
White House: Drone Strikes ‘Legal and Ethical’
  Obama Aide: Constitution Makes Strikes Lawful Anywhere on Planet   Fresh off of an interview yesterday in which he shrugged off civilian killings in the US drone war, top White House adviser John O. Brennan was ordered to provide more “openness” on the program at a speech today in Washington.   This...
Slamming the door to justice on Palestinians
  Israel's ability to commit crimes against Palestinians with impunity relies on international complicity.   There is a determined international effort to ensure that Palestinians are shut out of every legal forum where they could pursue justice for Israel's crimes against them. Nothing illustrates this better than the horrifying case of the...
'Jewish democracy' founded on ugly battles
  Israel has a Jewish majority today because of the expulsions and denationalization of most Palestinians living there.   Among the many good reasons for marking the anniversary of the Nakba are two which speak to the intensifying debate about Israel's "democratic values": firstly, the fact that the Nakba is ongoing, in...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved