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Welfare Association is providing 1,000
children in 13 kindergartens with daily hot meals for the next six
months. The KGs are located in 5 geographic areas in the Gaza Strip.
This latest initiative is part of a $225,000 project funded through a
special appeal of the US-based United Palestinian Appeal (UPA). UPA
conducted the appeal in late 2006 to support the Welfare Association in
providing emergency food assistance to the neediest Palestinians,
especially in Gaza. The project has double benefits since it provides
basic items for those going hungry in Gaza while also benefiting a
starving economy; the food stuffs are purchased from local Palestinian
producers and suppliers and distributed in the community. More than
32,000 persons are directly benefiting from the program. In addition to
the hot meals for 1,000 preschoolers, the program provided food
packages for 5,000 needy families (30,000 individuals), and food
supplies for 1,000 needy persons in orphanages and elderly homes.
The
timely program addresses a situation that is deteriorating daily. About
75 percent of Gaza’s population of 1.5 million now lives in poverty, up
more than 10 percent from this summer, according to Palestinian
government officials in the West Bank. With unemployment topping 60
percent, a growing number of Palestinian children are roaming the
streets of Gaza looking for a meager wage to help support their
impoverished families. According to the September 2007 report of the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the local
market is experiencing shortages of an increasing number of basic food
items – including fruits, fresh and frozen meat and fish, frozen
vegetables, chicken, powdered milk, dairy products, beverages and
cooking oil. The World Food Programme (WFP) has also reported
significant increase in the cost of these items due to global price
increases and tight restrictions on the import of goods into Gaza. In
September, the cost of a chicken rose by 50% and a kilo of fresh meat
rose by 25%.
Welfare
Association has been supporting emergency relief projects in addition
to its regular development programs. In 2006, WA supported 36 projects
which provided basic needs to poor households and individuals, valued
at over $3.5 million. Around 340,000 persons benefited from these
emergency relief programs.

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