Hamas
launches Gaza rebuilding programme
January
18, 2011 3:06:29 PM
* Dozens of families still living in
tents
* Hamas declines to disclose source
of project funding
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Hamas
launched a programme on Tuesday to rebuild 1,000 homes in the Gaza Strip
destroyed during an Israeli offensive two years ago, a project that could boost
the Islamist group's standing in the enclave it controls.
Hamas, shunned by the West for
refusing to renounce violence, declined to disclose the project's cost or the
source of its funding. International donations towards reconstruction in Gaza
have been held up by Hamas's split with the Palestinian Authority controlling
the West Bank.
Dozens of families are still living
in tents and depend on aid from relief agencies after their homes were destroyed
in the December 2008-January 2009 Gaza war, which Israel said was aimed at
curbing cross-border rocket attacks.
"We are announcing today the
launching of the first project to rebuild what had been destroyed by the
occupation in all of the Gaza Strip," Ismail Haniyeh, prime minister of
Hamas's Gaza-based government, said at a cornerstone-laying ceremomy.
Youssef al-Mansi, the
Hamas-appointed minister of public works, said construction would begin at
several sites within a week to 10 days.
Majed Goma, whose family of eight
has lived in the only two rooms of his home that were not damaged in the Gaza
war, said he hoped the project marked the beginning a "a new era -- the
era of rebuilding".
Reconstruction has been limited by
Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip, a measure also largely in effect at
Egypt's border crossing with the territory.
Some cement has been smuggled into
the Gaza Strip from Egypt through a network of tunnels, and Israel has been
allowing international aid agencies to import building material through its
frontier with the enclave.
International donors have pledged
$4.8 billion for reconstruction, but the money has been held back because Hamas
and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah movement have failed to form a
unity government to handle the donations.
Asked about the source of money for
the new project, Mansi said "there are no donor countries" and that
the Hamas-led government would finance all the work.
A U.S. diplomatic cable released by
WikiLeaks quoted Egypt's intelligence chief Omar Suleiman as saying Iran was
giving Hamas $25 million a month but Egypt was preventing funds from entering
Gaza. Iran says its support for Hamas is diplomatic only. (Editing by Peter
Graff)
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