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Occupied Palestinian Territory: Gaza offensive adds to scale of displacement
/3FAEB86D61E38B15C125769C003B7F14/$file/opt_cp_dec09.jpg) A woman looks for papers in what remains of her demolished house in South Hebron, 2008. (Photo: Anne Paq/ Activestills.org)
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- Country Statistics
- Latest IDP figure:
- At least 160,000
... Click here for more
- Number of refugees:
- (Originating from the country)
95,177 (UNHCR, June 2010); 4,379,050 (UNRWA, 31 March 2006)
- Total Population:
- 4.3 million
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31 December 2009
2009 marked one of the most violent periods in the West Bank and Gaza since they were first occupied in 1967. The three-week Israeli offensive launched in Gaza in December 2008 cost the lives of over 1,000 people and led to the displacement of between 100,000 and 200,000 people. Though reported estimates varied, at least a further 129,000 people had been displaced within the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) during the preceding four decades. As of the end of 2009, conservative estimates suggested that over 160,000 people were internally displaced, of whom 20,000 were in Gaza; however this latter figure may be much higher.
Tens of thousands of people were still displaced in Gaza at the end of the year, owing in part to the Israeli government’s refusal to permit the transit of construction materials following the offensive. At the end of 2009, 20,000 people were receiving rental assistance but an undefined number remained displaced among the host community. IDPs were enduring precarious conditions with many living in makeshift structures or sharing overcrowded facilities with hosts.
In areas of the West Bank under Israeli administration, including East Jerusalem, several hundred Palestinians were displaced by house demolitions in 2009. There are no figures on the number of people whose residency in East Jerusalem was revoked during the year, but figures published for 2008 revealed an unprecedented number of revocations, affecting over 4,000 Palestinians. An estimated 100,000 people also remained at risk of displacement, including 60,000 in East Jerusalem alone.
The lack of profiling makes it hard to say where they have been displaced to. Generally, IDPs are thought to be dispersed among host communities in various areas away from Israeli infrastructure. In Gaza, people displaced due to incursions have sought shelter with relatives, or in public buildings or schools until the violence ends or longer-term accommodation becomes possible.
The persistence of displacement since 1967 attests to an Israeli policy of forced displacement for the purpose of acquiring land, redefining demographic boundaries, and divesting Palestinians of ownership guaranteed under international law. According to the Representative of the UN Secretary-General on the human rights of IDPs, it has been caused by incursions and military clearing operations, evictions, land appropriations and house demolitions, the illegal expansion of settlements and related infrastructure, the construction of the Separation Wall, violence by settlers, discriminatory denial of building permits, and the revocation of residency rights in East Jerusalem. Displacement has also been caused by restrictions on freedom of movement and a system of closures that make life untenable for many residents of Palestinian enclaves. In 2006, the former UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in OPT described the displacement arising from the construction of the Separation Wall as analogous to what had been described as ethnic cleansing in other contexts.
Palestinians, displaced or not, face a deepening protection crisis. Violence, restrictions on their movement and discriminatory policies and regulations have increased the vulnerability of the community as a whole, while the humanitarian situation has worsened in Gaza as a result of its isolation since the 2007 takeover by Hamas and the 2008 –2009 offensive. In addition, displacement has entailed loss of family unity, social welfare and livelihoods, and has had wide-ranging physical and psychological impacts including trauma and anxiety for children. Communities in areas under threat of expulsion or eviction have also faced harassment and intimidation.
Internal displacement is generally not recognised by the government of Israel; although the Israeli state remains the primary perpetrator of forced displacement, it does not provide assistance or protection to IDPs. The Palestinian authorities in West Bank and Gaza, despite attempts to address displacement, have been impaired by the ongoing policies of occupation, limited jurisdiction under the Oslo Accords, political turmoil and poor governance.
Though several UN agencies have responded to concerns of victims of displacement within their respective mandates, there is no international agency in OPT with an explicit mandate for IDP protection. Palestinian, Israeli and international NGOs have researched and publicised the impact of house demolitions and the Separation Wall on Palestinian populations, and helped grassroots communities to prevent or seek to reverse processes of displacement, on occasion providing legal and other assistance to victims of eviction orders or demolitions.
For the vast majority of IDPs in OPT, durable solutions remain tied to the reversal of policies of occupation, and an eventual resolution to the conflict.
15 July 2010: East Jerusalem demolitions and settlements add to threat of new displacement
Palestinians in East Jerusalem have been displaced as their homes have been demolished, and plans for new settlements have put others at growing risk of displacement. On 3 June, four members of the Palestinian Legislative Council received notice from Israeli police that their residency permits in Jerusalem were being revoked, the first time Israeli authorities have invoked political affiliation as grounds for the removal of residency. On 13 July, the municipality demolished a number of buildings in East Jerusalem, including several homes, forcibly displacing at least 26 people, including 14 children. The previous day the construction of 32 housing units for the settlement of Pisgat Zeev had been approved. According to Haaretznewspaper, some 50,000 new housing units were reported to be in various stages of planning and approval on occupied land in East Jerusalem in March 2010.
Palestinians face ongoing discrimination in having to make way for settlements in East Jerusalem and elsewhere. In July, the city’s legal advisor described a two-year delay by the police in evacuating Israeli settlers from an illegal settlement as “liable to create harsh feelings of discrimination and serious damage to the rule of law”. Revocation of residency permits has increased in the last few years, and new Israeli military orders allow Israeli authorities to forcibly transfer Palestinians within the OPT, in contravention of international law. In June 2010, the Israeli NGO HaMoked obtained information under the Freedom of Information Act which suggested that nearly 35,000 Palestinians could be at risk of being forcibly transferred from West Bank to Gaza under the new military orders.
28 May 2009: Living conditions for IDPs in Gaza deteriorating
Tens of thousands of people displaced within the Gaza Strip since the Israeli offensive of December and January face further deterioration in their living conditions because of the continuing Israeli blockade. The only entry point for commercial goods and humanitarian aid from Israel to Gaza is controlled by the civilian section of the Israeli Ministry of Defence, and goods have been held at the crossing for weeks and have often been damaged before they reach the beneficiaries in Gaza.
The ban on commercial items including construction materials and spare parts has brought reconstruction of homes and infrastructure to a halt. UN and other humanitarian agencies have called for full access and an end to the embargo so that the recovery and reconstruction efforts can proceed.
According to the UN, 2009 marked one of the most violent periods experienced by the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza since the occupation began in 1967. The three-week Israeli offensive in Gaza launched in December 2008 cost the lives of over 1,000 Palestinians and led to the displacement of over 100,000 people. In Gaza, the continued Israeli blockade has stalled reconstruction and limited the access to assistance of the tens of thousands of people still displaced. In the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) demolitions of houses by the Israeli authorities has continued to cause displacement, displacing close to 600 Palestinians in 2009.
Though estimates vary, at least a further 129,000 people were reportedly displaced within the Occupied Palestinian Territory (the OPT) during the four decades to 2008. In addition, close to 100,000 people are reportedly at risk of displacement. (...)
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30 December 2009
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| Overview: |
Gaza offensive adds to scale of displacement (30 December 2009) HTML | PDF |
| ملخص تحديث: |
الهجوم على غزة يضيف إلى أعداد المشردين (30 ديسمبر /كانون الأول 2009) HTML | PDF |
Internal Displacement Profile
"Causes and Background","Background","Methodology","Causes","Peace Process","Applied Law"
"Population Figures and Profile","Global Figures","Profile"
"Patterns of Displacement","General Patterns","House Demolitions & Displacement","Separation Wall","Settlements & Displacement","East Jerusalem","Military Incursions & Strategy","Closures and Displacement"
"Physical Security & Freedom of Movement","Physical Security","Freedom of Movement","Child Protection"
"Subsistence Needs","Socio Economic Situation","Access to Health","Access to Land","Access to Water"
"Access to Education","General Access to Education"
"Issues of Self-Reliance and Public Participation","General Coping Strategies"
"Documentation Needs and Citizenship","General Documentation Needs and Subsistence"
"Issues of Family Unity, Identity and Culture","General Family Unity","General Freedom of Religion"
"Property Issues","General Property Issues","Appropriation under Occupation","Restitution and Compensation","UN Registrar on Damages"
"Patterns of Return and Resettlement","General Pattern of Return and Resettlement"
"Humanitarian Access","General Humanitarian Access","Access in West Bank","Access in Gaza"
"National and International Responses","National Response","Regional Response","International Response"
Previous Profile updates
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- Key Documents
- Briefing to the Security Council on the Situation in the Middle East, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process and Personal Representative of the Secretary General to the Palestine Liberation Organisation and the Palestinian Authority, 15 June 2010
- Report of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, Richard Falk, A/HRC/13/53/Rev.1, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, 7 June 2010
- As safe as houses? Israel's demolition of Palestinian homes, Amnesty International (AI), June 2010
- Jerusalem: An Open City?, BIMKOM and IR AMIM, June 2010
- "I lost everything": Investigate Unlawful Destruction in Gaza War, Human Rights Watch (HRW), May 2010
- Impeding Assistance: Challenges to Meeting the Humanitarian Needs of Palestinians, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA), May 2010
- Tipping Point? Palestinians and the Search for A New Strategy: Middle East Report N°95, International Crisis Group (ICG), 26 April 2010
- Israel, the Conflict and Peace: Answers to frequently asked q uestions, Government of Israel, 30 December 2009
- Green Zone: Three clips explaining the policy of house demolitions in East Jerusalem., Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD), 17 December 2009
- Restricting Space: The Planning Regime Applied by Israel in Area C of the West Bank, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA), 15 December 2009
- OPT 2010 Consolidated Appeal, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA), 30 November 2009
- Life on the Edge: The struggle to survive and the impact of forced displacement in high risk areas of the occupied Palestinian territory, Save the Children and Ma'an Development Centre, October 2009
- Human Rights in Palestine and Other Arab Territories: Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, A/HRC/12/48., United Nations Human Rights Council (UN HRC), 15 September 2009
- Minimum Framework for the Provision of Humanitarian Assistance in Gaza, Humanitarian Country Team / UN OCHA, 30 April 2009
- Broken Homes Addressing the Impact of House Demolitions on Palestinian Children & Families, Save the Children, April 2009
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