UN Staff in Gaza Strikes Over US Aid Cuts and Job Losses

Palestinian protesters wave national flags during clashes with Israeli security forces on the eastern outskirts of Gaza City, near the border with Israel, on January 12, 2018. Photo: Mohammed Abed, AFP

Staff at the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees went on strike in the Gaza Strip on Monday to protest against U.S. funding cuts and job losses.

The U.S. has traditionally been UNRWA’s largest funder, providing around $350 million a year. But President Donald Trump has cut all support, sparking a funding crisis.

UNRWA said the funding deficit caused by the Trump administration’s withdrawal of support is so severe that cuts are unavoidable. More than 250 jobs have been cut in Gaza and the West Bank so far, while hundreds of full-time roles have become part-time.

Around 13,000 people work for the agency in Gaza, where more than two-thirds of the roughly two million residents are eligible for aid.

The one-day strike closed more than 250 U.N. Relief and Works Agency schools in Gaza, as well as medical centers and food aid distribution points. UNRWA says more than 200,000 Palestinians attend its schools in the strip.

The refugee agency’s labor union is demanding the job cuts be reversed and its leaders say the strike could be the first of a number of measures.

A small protest took place outside of the agency’s Gaza headquarters.

“The strike comes in light of the [UNRWA] administration’s lack of responsiveness to the demands of the employees’ union and their insistence on not solving their problems,” Amal al-Batsh, deputy head of the union, said in a statement.

UNRWA’s spokesman Chris Gunness said the agency regretted the strike.

“We regret any action that negatively impacts the services we provide to refugees, particularly in a place like Gaza where after a more than a decade of blockade they have suffered enough,” he told AFP.

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