BSS
  02 May 2024, 23:48

Gaza needs biggest post-war reconstruction effort since WWII: UN

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories, May  2, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - The United
Nations said Thursday that the post-war reconstruction of Gaza would require an
international effort unseen since the aftermath of World War II, estimating it
could cost up to $40 billion.

It came as Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh struck an optimistic tone over a
possible truce and hostage release deal for Gaza, after weeks of largely
stalled negotiations.

There have been reports of sticking points between the militant group and
Israel nearly seven months into the war that has devastated the Palestinian
territory.

But Haniyeh, head of the militant group's Qatar-based political bureau,
said in calls to Egyptian and Qatari mediators that Hamas was studying the
latest proposal with a "positive spirit".

Much of Gaza has been reduced to a grey landscape of rubble and the United
Nations estimated the cost of reconstruction at between $30 billion and $40
billion.

"The scale of the destruction is huge and unprecedented... this is a
mission that the global community has not dealt with since World War II," UN
assistant secretary-general Abdallah al-Dardari told a briefing in the
Jordanian capital Amman.

The UN official said "72 percent of all residential buildings have been
completely or partially destroyed".

Reconstruction is made more difficult by the presence of large quantities
of unexploded ordnance in the debris that Gaza's Civil Defence agency says
triggers "more than 10 explosions every week".

The war started with Hamas's October 7 attack on Israel that resulted in
the deaths of 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of
Israeli official figures.

Israel estimates that 129 captives seized by militants during their attack
remain in Gaza. The military says 34 of them are dead.

Israel's retaliatory offensive against Hamas has killed at least 34,596
people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in
the Hamas-run territory.

- 'Get this done' -

Mediators have proposed a deal that would halt fighting for 40 days and
exchange Israeli hostages for potentially thousands of Palestinian prisoners,
according to details released by Britain.

An Israeli official not authorised to speak publicly said Israel was still
waiting for Hamas's formal response to the latest proposal.

Before Haniyeh's comments on Thursday, Hamas officials had given it a
generally negative reception.

Senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan told AFP late Wednesday that the
movement's position on the proposal was "negative" for the time being.

Another senior Hamas official, Suhail al-Hindi, said the group's aim
remained an "end to this war" -- a goal at odds with the stated position of
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

But the militant group has come under intense pressure from mediators to
accept the latest offer.

"Hamas needs to say yes and needs to get this done," US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken said in Israel Wednesday on his latest Middle East crisis tour.

- Mounting criticism -

Following talks with Blinken, Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid said the
prime minister "doesn't have any political excuse not to move to a deal for the
release of the hostages".

Regardless of whether a truce is reached, Netanyahu has vowed to send
Israeli ground troops into Rafah, despite US opposition to any operation that
fails to provide protection for the 1.5 million civilians sheltering in Gaza's
southernmost city.

"We will do what is necessary to win and overcome our enemy, including in
Rafah," he pledged at the start of a cabinet meeting Thursday.

Separately, Netanyahu told a delegation of Holocaust survivors that Jews
should welcome but not expect non-Jewish support and should be ready to "stand
alone" if necessary.

"If it is possible to recruit Gentiles, that's good. But if we don't
protect ourselves, no one will protect us," he told the group at his office.

The prime minister faces regular protests calling on him to make a deal
that would bring home the remaining captives.

On Thursday, protesters set up over-sized photographs of women hostages
outside Netanyahu's Jerusalem residence. In Tel Aviv they again blocked a
highway.

Criticism of the war has also intensified in the United States, Israel's
top military supplier.

Demonstrations have spread to at least 30 US universities, with some
protesters erecting encampments to oppose Gaza's rising death toll.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog slammed the student protests, charging that
US universities had been "contaminated by hatred and anti-Semitism".

President Joe Biden said the United States was "not an authoritarian nation
where we silence people" but added that anti-Semitism had "no place" on US
campuses.

- A mother's tears -

In response to US pressure, Israel has allowed increased aid deliveries
into Gaza in recent days, including through a reopened crossing.

But UN aid chief Martin Griffiths said that "improvements in bringing more
aid into Gaza" cannot be used "to prepare for or justify a full-blown military
assault on Rafah".

At south Gaza's largest hospital, the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis,
which was heavily damaged by fighting in February, foreign aid and borrowed
equipment has helped to "almost completely" restore the emergency department,
its director Atef al-Hout said.

Witnesses and an AFP correspondent reported air strikes on Khan Yunis
Thursday and shelling in the Rafah area, while militants and Israeli troops
battled in Gaza City.

In north Gaza, workers unloaded aid at Kamal Adwan Hospital where Alaa
al-Nadi's son lay motionless in the intensive care unit, his head almost
completely swathed in bandages.

Nadi, who was also wounded in the strike, said she feared the hospital's
power might go out, cutting the boy's oxygen and killing him.

"I call on the world to transfer my son for treatment abroad. He is in a
very bad condition," she said, breaking down in tears.