UN Sets Up Camps For Palestinian Children Hit By School Strike In West Bank
New York, Oct 3 2006 4:00PM
With 500,000 Palestinian children out of school due to a strike in the West Bank that has left most public schools
closed, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has set up youth clubs to provide extracurricular activities, safe indoor and outdoor play areas, and centres to
provide literacy and computer training.
The lack of access to schools come on top of an already very difficult year in which the number of children killed and
injured are close to record highs as youngsters continue to take the brunt of the unrest in the Occupied Palestinian
Territories, UNICEF spokesman Michael Bociurkiw told a news briefing in Geneva today.
In Gaza, since 28 June, 58 children have been killed and 128 children injured, he said.
The main reason for the strike is non-payment of civil service salaries. The Territories have been particularly hard hit
since Israel stopped tax transfers and other countries suspended contributions to the Palestinian Authority (PA) after
the Hamas election victory in January.
Israel and international donors insist that Hamas, whose charter is committed to Israel’s destruction, must subscribe to
the principles of non-violence, recognize Israel’s right to exist, and accept previous agreements and obligations,
including the UN-backed Roadmap plan providing for two states living side by side in peace.
Various UN agencies have warned regularly over the past months of a looming humanitarian emergency in the occupied
Palestinian territories as food, health and education services crumble.
Of all the schools in the West Bank, 24 per cent are run by the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the main provider of
basic services to over 4.3 million registered Palestinian refugees in the Middle East, six per cent are private, and 70
per cent are Government-run, meaning that the majority of children attend public schools.
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