Israel bans workers from Gaza as border tensions escalate

Israel bans workers from Gaza as border tensions escalate

World

Israel bans workers from Gaza as border tensions escalate

GAZA (Reuters) - Israel shut crossing points with Gaza on Wednesday, preventing thousands of workers from getting to their jobs in Israel and the West Bank, after days of border demonstrations in which Israeli troops have opened fire on stone-throwing protesters.

Around 18,000 Gazans have permits from Israeli authorities to work outside the blockaded enclave, providing a vital injection of cash amounting to some $2 million a day to the impoverished territory's economy.

Protests backed by Hamas, the Islamist group that controls Gaza, have been held for days, against issues ranging from the treatment of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails to Jewish visits to the Al Aqsa mosque compound, a site holy to both Muslims and Jews, who know it as the Temple Mount.

Demonstrators along the Gaza separation fence have hurled stones as well as improvised explosive devices while Israeli troops have responded with tear gas and live fire.

On Tuesday, a Palestinian man was shot dead by Israeli forces during the protests 11 others were wounded, and on Wednesday four more were wounded by Israeli gunfire, according to Gaza health officials. A statement from a group calling itself "Youth of Revolution" vowed to continue with the protest.

A spokesperson for Cogat, the Israeli Defence Ministry agency that coordinates with the Palestinians, confirmed that the Erez crossing into Gaza was closed and said it would be re-opened "by situational assessments". Cogat did not respond to requests for further details.

Egypt, which shares a border with Gaza and Israel, issued a statement calling for calm and urging Israel to avoid "collective punishment".

The border closure, following a brief ban on exports from Gaza earlier this month after inspectors found explosives in a consignment of goods, will add pressure to an economy already under strain due to blockades imposed by Israel and Egypt.

"We are too afraid the crossing won't open anytime soon and I go back to living in poverty and need," said one Gaza father of five, who has been sleeping at the Palestinian side of the Erez crossing since Sunday evening.

According to IMF figures, per capita income in Gaza is only a quarter of the level in the West Bank and unemployment is running at nearly 50%, according to the World Bank.

Ayman Abu Krayyem, spokesman of the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Labour, said that as a result of the closure 8,000 workers who returned to Gaza because of Israeli Jewish holidays have been stranded in the territory since the ban.

Over the past few weeks, the military said its soldiers had been using riot dispersal means against Palestinians throwing explosives at the border fence along the Gaza Strip.

Egypt and Qatar, two key mediators in previous rounds of fighting, were talking to the two sides in a bid to prevent a slide into a new wave of armed confrontation, said one Palestinian official familiar with those efforts.