Powered by WebAds

Monday, January 09, 2006

'25% of Gaza evacuees lack housing'

Israel Matzav

'25% of Gaza evacuees lack housing'

The government keeps telling us that the evacuation expulsion of Jews from Gaza was 'planned' and that sufficient arrangements were made for the evacuees. In the meantime, evidence continues to mount otherwise:

Five months since they were evacuated from their Gaza homes this summer, 25 percent of the former residents are still living in hotel rooms, dormitories and tents, according to a new report released Sunday by the non-profit group Lema'an Acheinu, which has been assisting the evacuees.

The report paints a grim picture of the evacuees' economic, emotional and family situations, including drug and alcohol use by teens and increase divorce rates.

According to the report, more than 50% have yet to receive any compensation funds, and only 5.7% of the 2,100 people who lost their jobs have found new ones.

The Disengagement Authority disputes that number, however, explaining that 1,000 families have received 75% or 100% of the funds due them, while another 500 were given advances. Some 200 families have yet to receive any money, said an Authority spokesman.


And of course you all recall what happened when American Jews tried to help the Gaza evacuees.

...

Council of Jewish Communities in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip Spokeswoman Emily Amrusi, who distributed the report to the media for Lema'an Acheinu, defended the numbers with respect to the compensation funds, and accused the state of lying. The state has a vested interested in making the situation sound better than it is, she said.

With respect to employment, the report found that only 10% of the 2,100 people who lost their jobs as a result of disengagement have found new ones. It added that only 36 of the 130 who owned Gaza farms had relocated their agricultural businesses. Of those, only 11 did so with the help of the Disengagement Authority and the remainder found independent solutions.


...

For the first time, according to the report, these teens were experimenting with drugs and alcohol. There have also been a few suicide attempts, the report said.

An increase in the number of divorces among the evacuee families was also found.


Now, here's where the politics really come in:

Meanwhile, State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss on Sunday postponed publication of the first of his three reports on the government's handling of the disengagement from Gaza. The report deals with the protection of the settlements that ring the Gaza Strip and are vulnerable to Kassam and mortar attacks.

Now, this being Israel, the 'postponement' wouldn't have anything to do with the elections would it? Nah, why would I even think that?

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Google