
JERUSALEM - 23 February 2007 - 347 words
UN report shows nearly half of Palestinians now suffer from malnutrition
Dan Bergin
Nearly half (around 46 per cent) of households in Gaza and the West Bank are malnourished, according to a UN report on the impact of conflict and the global boycott of the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority.
The draft report, jointly produced by the UN's World Food Programme and the Food and Agriculture Organisation, was quoted by a number of news services last night.
It paints a bleak picture of the plight of ordinary families, saying that the situation is most grim in Gaza, where four out of five families have reduced their spending - including on food - in the first quarter of last year alone.
While the report says traditionally strong ties among Palestinian families tend to reduce the possibility of acute household hunger, it warns that after years of shortages, and the loss of PA salaries because of the boycott, there are now "growing concerns about the sustainability of Palestinians' resilience".
Although humanitarian aid helps to contain the problem, the report points out that some action taken by families to continue to feed themselves - including the sale of land, jewellery and other assets - will have an "irreversible impact on livelihoods". It also points out that limitations to PA budget support, the private sector and job programmes because of the boycott are likely to exacerbate Palestinians' dependency on humanitarian assistance and postpone sustainable improvement."
The report says that Palestinian families have been caught between rises in food prices - partly because of interrupted supplies through closures - and rapidly falling incomes. This has led to changes to diet by many to ensure enough to eat. These include reductions in consumption of fruits, sweets, olive oil, and - normally a staple in Gaza - fish.
The report is the latest of a series detailing
deepening Palestinian poverty as a result of both closures blocking
exports from Gaza and the international and Israeli boycott of
the Palestinian Authority.
A 2004 survey of Palestinian households also showed a "slow
but steady" growth in malnutrition - as measured by reduced
growth, vitamin deficiencies, anaemia and other indicators - among
a minority of the population. The 2004 survey found "stunting"
rates of abnormal height-to-body ratio at just under 10 per cent.
In spite of such reports, both Israel
and the US have indicated that they will maintain the boycott
after the planned Fatah Hamas coalition cabinet takes office,
unless it clearly commits itself to recognition of Israel, renunciation
of violence and adherence to previous agreements with Israel.
© Independent Catholic
News 2007
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