Gaza students begin new school term amid uncertainty

Published August 28, 2023
UNRWA Director Thomas White talks to students during his visit to the school in Gaza, on Sunday.—Reuters
UNRWA Director Thomas White talks to students during his visit to the school in Gaza, on Sunday.—Reuters

GAZA: Gaza’s students began their new school term on Sunday, but it is unclear if they will be able to complete the year uninterrupted due to a funding crisis at the United Nations’ Palestinian refugee agency.

The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) runs 288 schools in the Palestinian territory, among 700 across parts of the Middle East region that it funds alongside 140 medical clinics.

But it is short of nearly $200 million needed to pay for staff salaries and keep the services running until the end of 2023.

“We haven’t secured all the funding we need to ensure that our schools can remain operational until the end of this year, so we are working on securing the funds needed to keep schools in Gaza open,” said Thomas White, Gaza director of UNRWA’s affairs.

UN agency says funds shortage could hamper educational activities

White said some donor countries would hold discussion about funding for UNRWA in September.

“In the event we don’t get the funding, it is 298,000 students who might not be going to school. In Gaza, it is 1.2m people who may not have access to health care,” White said during a visit to one UN-run school in Gaza City. In addition to the $200m to support its operational budget in the wider region, UNRWA also needs $75m for food aid in Gaza.

Two-thirds of Gaza’s 2.3m population are refugees, mainly the descen­dants of those who fled or had been forced to flee their hometowns and villages around the 1948 war which saw the birth of the state of Israel.

The UNRWA schools educate a little under half of Gaza’s young people, with around 300,000 students at government-run schools and others at privately owned schools.

In Nusseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, Palestinian refugee Sami Abu Mallouh, 47, said his family of 12 depended on UNRWA for education, medical treatment and food aid. “Without UNRWA we are worth nothing,” Mallouh said.

Published in Dawn, August 28th, 2023

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