|  Palestinians 
              face humanitarian disaster, warns US government group
 By Justin Huggler in the West BankThe Independent
 06 August 2002
 
 
 A report by a US government agency warned of a "humanitarian 
              disaster" in the West Bank and Gaza Strip yesterday as the 
              Israeli government announced stricter controls on Palestinians following 
              the deaths of 13 Israelis in militant attacks in 24 hours. One fifth of Palestinian children under five are suffering from 
              malnutrition, according to the report released yesterday by the 
              United States Agency for International Development (USAid) and the 
              charity Care International. The report found 13.2 per cent of Palestinians under five were 
              suffering chronic, or medium- to long-term malnourishment, while 
              9.3 per cent were suffering acute malnourishment, caused very recently. Some of the malnourished children are in a small Palestinian village 
              near the city of Nablus. Ismehan Jaber's three-year-old son, Fadi, 
              was sick. She thought he had a chest infection, but she could not 
              afford a doctor. Ms Jaber and her husband Kher live with their seven children in 
              a half-finished building. The living room has bare concrete walls 
              and a gaping hole where the window should be. Fadi's 13-year-old brother, Abd al-Qadir, said: "For dinner, 
              last night I had bread and tea. For breakfast, one egg, no vegetables 
              or anything. And for lunch today I had just one tomato, that's all." 
              Abd al-Qadir said he frequently suffers headaches and stomach pains. Two years ago, before the start of the Israeli blockades, the family 
              ate well. The house is half-finished because since the intifida began Mr 
              Jaber and others like him have not been allowed to work in Israel. 
              Desperate to make some money to feed his children as a casual construction 
              worker, Mr Jaber began sneaking across secretly but was caught and 
              sent to prison for three months. The Israeli government yesterday ordered a total ban on Palestinians 
              travelling in the north West Bank, except for medical emergencies. 
              It also sealed off the town of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. The USAid report published yesterday found food shortages caused 
              by the blockades were a major cause of malnutrition. The Israeli 
              authorities argue they are the only way to stop militant attacks.   |