{"id":200189,"date":"2016-03-31T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-12T17:55:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/?p=200189"},"modified":"2019-03-12T17:55:40","modified_gmt":"2019-03-12T17:55:40","slug":"auto-insert-200189","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/auto-insert-200189\/","title":{"rendered":"Gaza Situation Report (Issue No. 137) – UNRWA update"},"content":{"rendered":"
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GAZA SITUATION REPORT 137<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n 31 March 2016<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n 22 – 29 March 2016 | Issue 137<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n • The UNRWA Gaza Rehabilitation Centre for Visually Impaired (RCVI) in March 2016 <\/span>introduced tablet computers for 51 visually impaired RCVI students<\/span>,<\/u><\/span> and 166 students with low vision integrated in UNRWA schools, to increase their opportunities to learn, study and develop. Prior to the introduction of the tablets, UNRWA trained 31 RCVI and Special Education Needs teachers on the use of the tablets and the “<\/span>Voice Dream Reader”-<\/u><\/a>software to support and encourage their students. To be able to use tablets, visually impaired people use text-to-speech software to access electronic text documents. This technology has markedly improved with time, and the Voice Dream Reader, developed by the independent Voice Dream company, is a self-voicing app for operating system (OS) devices that can open and read aloud a wide variety of file formats, ranging from Portable Document Format (PDF) files to Power Point presentations. Through this project, UNRWA aims at bringing the latest technology to visually impaired children and braille users. The goal is not to replace braille, but to supplement and enrich the educational values and benefits that braille offers. The RCVI is part of the UNRWA Relief and Social Services Programme (RSSP) and offers education and recreational activities for children with visual impairments (blindness or partial sight), aged six to twelve. It is the only centre in Gaza providing these services service for the visually impaired. Both Palestine refugees and non-refugees are accepted for enrollment at the RCVI.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n • With a view to help address unemployment among youth, on 20 March, under the “Improving the exercise of young graduate women’s right to work in Gaza Strip through professional internships” project, the UNRWA Gender Initiative (GI) started the first of three rounds of work placements for female graduates who successfully completed the three-month Young Women Leaders Programme (YWLP) training. In the first placement round, 83 graduates will start their professional internships in the public or private sector – including in Non-Governments and Community-Based Organizations. The second and third rounds of placements will be conducted over the course of 2016; in total, the project will offer work placements for 227 YWLP graduates. The YWLP is designed to empower and build the capacity of unemployed young female graduates between 22 to 28 years old through training and work placements. It also aims to close the skills gap between the labour market ensuring women are developing transferrable skills and experience. Through leadership and self-development coaching, advanced training in computers, English and management – combined with work placement schemes – the programme enhances the employability and self-confidence of young women graduates. With this project, the GI contributes to the UNRWA strategic goal of improving employability of Palestine refugees in Gaza.<\/p><\/div>\n • In June 2016, the blockade on Gaza will enter its tenth year. Severe restrictions of movement of goods and people related to the blockade have crippled the enclave’s once thriving trade-based economy. Prior to the blockade, in 2000, an average of 1,271 truckloads of vegetables, textiles and\/or furniture exited Gaza for Israel, the West Bank and the world per month; this number declined to 432 in 2007, and stood at 176 in February 2016 (with only 0.3 per cent of the export goods being non-food items), according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS). The Israeli-imposed restrictions on the movement of people and goods related to the blockade have pushed a large part of the population into unemployment, poverty, aid dependency and food insecurity. According to the <\/span>2015 Socio-Economic and Food Security (SEFsec) report<\/u><\/a> <\/span> by the Food Security Sector in the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) – the only report that measures food insecurity in the oPt for refugees and non- refugees alike – the blockade has led to a general food access decline in Gaza. The report states that 47 per cent of households in Gaza were food insecure in 2014, a two per cent increase compared to the previous year. According to UNRWA analysis, high food prices and volatility of the economy have also reportedly contributed to food insecurity in Gaza. Data from PCBS shows that price fluctuations of certain staple food items were significant during 2015; the price of fresh vegetables for example increased by 17 per cent, fresh meat by 18 per cent, and rice by 15 per cent during 2015. UNWRA Gaza Field Office also monitors the price of the ‘cheapest’ commodities available in the market to capture changes in the costs of food for the poorest households. The UNWRA food price index currently stands at 9.3 per cent above the June 2013 level, before the closure of the tunnels between Gaza and Egypt, meaning that the price of the cheapest commodities increased by this percentage over the past three years. In addition, according to PCBS, in Gaza increasing prices are combined with falling wages, which also decreases the purchasing power of those employed. One of the ways through which UNRWA has responded to rising food insecurity in Gaza is by continuing to assess needs and provide food to those who need it most. In the year 2000, the Agency provided approximately 80,000 refugees in Gaza with food assistance. This number has increased to over 950,000 today, or about half the population in Gaza.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n • UNRWA will introduce its new and improved food baskets for Palestine refugees in Gaza in the second food distribution round this year – from April to June 2016. Earlier this year, the Agency launched an extensive refugee community outreach campaign on its improved food baskets to ensure that all questions and concerns of UNRWA staff, beneficiaries as well as other community representatives and leaders are addressed in a pro-active way. This strategy is aligned with the humanitarian sector’s <\/span>Community Engagement<\/u><\/a> approach. One of the main improvements of the new UNRWA food baskets is the inclusion of lentils and chickpeas, selected due to their nutritional values and macro- and micro-nutrients. As part of the outreach campaign to communicate with Palestine refugees in Gaza, the Communications Office is currently also producing a cooking show which includes innovative, healthy and low-budget recipes based on the items in the new food baskets. In addition, it is also developing an animation video that explains the new food baskets in detail. Both shows will be broadcast on UNRWA TV and its corresponding YouTube channel during the second food distribution round April-June 2016 when over 950,000 beneficiaries are scheduled to receive the new food assistance.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n • The sixth annual agency-wide UNRWA Gender Task Force meeting was held in Amman from 22 to 24 March. During the meeting, the task force revised and validated the first draft of the 2016-2021 Gender Equality Strategy as well as a needs assessment for e-learning on gender and gender-based violence in emergencies. A roundtable event in relation to International Women’s Day (8 March), was also held<\/span>. A video on International Women’s Day celebrations in Gaza<\/u><\/a> is currently being broadcast on UNRWA TV and its corresponding You Tube channel. In the week prior to the task force meeting, a consultant visited Gaza Field Office to meet with various UNRWA programme and project representatives and with community groups. The consultant also visited UNRWA installations. The visit was for field research in developing the 2016-2021 Agency-wide Gender Equality Strategy and the consultant is involved in similar missions and meetings with other UNRWA fields of operation. The new UNRWA Gender Equality Strategy will include three main points: means and processes to improve the quality of services through gender mainstreaming; an accountability framework clarifying roles and responsibilities; and a gender action plan for the next five years.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n • In the context of Gaza’s dire socio-economic situation characterized also by a lack of economic opportunities, the <\/span>UNRWA Sulafa Embroidery Project<\/u><\/a> aims to provide meaningful and sustainable incomes for women and provide them with access to the local and international market. To create awareness in Gaza about the hand-made designs, Sulafa is currently organizing weekly bazaars in selected popular restaurants in Gaza city to exhibit and sell <\/span>products<\/u><\/a>, including pillows, shawls, handbags, small purses and ornaments. The Sulafa Centre has been supported and operated by UNRWA since 1950 and brings income into the homes of 300 Palestine refugee women through the production and sale of embroidery goods. In 2015, sales for the first half of the year were 90 per cent higher than in 2014, and 10 per cent higher than Sulafa’s best-ever start to the year.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n GENERAL<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n Operational environment:<\/i><\/span> <\/i><\/span> Regular demonstrations were held in Gaza during the reporting week, predominantly regarding the alleged pumping of water by the Egyptian authorities along the Gaza-Egypt border, requests for shelter, perceived service cuts and the pace of the Gaza reconstruction process.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n Demonstrations were also held in support of Al Aqsa mosque and the situation in the West Bank (see also Summary of Major Incidents). On 25 March, approximately 5,000 persons participated in a solidarity rally in Jabalia camp, northern Gaza.<\/p><\/div>\n On 22 March, Hamas members also gathered in Gaza city to mark the 12th anniversary of the assassination of Hamas leaders Ahmad Yasin and Abded Al Aziz Al Rantisi. On 27 March, Al Ahrar movement held a military funeral procession in Gaza city for one of its members who died in a car accident. Approximately 500 persons attended the funeral.<\/p><\/div>\n On 23 March, a 16-year old Palestinian boy died reportedly due to an electrical shock in his house in Gaza city. On the same day, a fire broke out in a commercial store close to the UNRWA West Distribution Centre in Rafah, southern Gaza, which resulted in extensive damages. The flames threatened to spread to the UNRWA Distribution Centre, however, this was prevented due to swift action from UNRWA guards. No injuries were reported. <\/p><\/div>\n UNRWA RESPONSE<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n “WITH THE TABLET, I FEEL LIKE A TEACHER IS ALWAYS WITH ME” <\/p>\n \n<\/p><\/div>\n
\nUNRWA REHABILITATION CENTRE FOR VISUALLY IMPAIRED PROVIDES TABLETS FOR ITS STUDENTS<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n