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svgadminsvgJanuary 26, 2014svgNews

Israel Allowing More Building Materials into Gaza

Israel is to allow the entry of more building materials into Gaza, the defense ministry said Sunday, and a UN refugee agency said they should be delivered soon.

“About 1,000 tons of cement and building materials will enter the Gaza Strip for storm damage restoration and other projects of UN agencies,” the Israeli defense ministry said in a statement.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which cares for Palestinian refugees, said it had been given the go-ahead for new construction.

“Israel informed UNRWA that it approved the entry of construction materials for six new projects in Gaza,” a residential neighbourhood and five schools, spokesman Ahmad Abu Hassna told AFP.

UNRWA said delivery was expected during the coming week.

The defense ministry statement said Israeli authorities “spoke with senior officials in the Palestinian Authority” and informed them of the decision.

But Raed Fatuh, the Palestinian Authority official in charge of the entry of goods into Gaza, said “the Palestinian side has not been officially informed about this”.

Israel in October reinstated an on-off ban on construction materials for Gaza, after troops discovered a sophisticated tunnel running under the Israel-Gaza border, built with the aim of perpetrating terror attacks.

In December it said it would allow renewed shipments but only for use in UN projects.

The import of steel and cement for private use has been banned, except for a brief interlude, since the Islamist group Hamas seized power in Gaza in 2007 for fear it would use such materials to build tunnels and fortify its fighters’ positions.

The territory has been under an Israeli blockade since 2006, when Gaza militants snatched an Israeli soldier who was released in a prisoner swap deal in 2011.

The blockade was tightened in 2007 after Hamas seized control, but eased considerably in recent years, following successive waves of international pressure.

Last month a fierce winter storm that hit the Middle East also battered the Palestinian enclave, with strong winds and heavy flooding causing damage to homes and infrastructure. However, UNRWA said that the work currently being planned was unrelated to storm repairs.

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