Gaza family destitute after father killed in airstrike

  • 8/22/2022
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Most of the workers do not have bank accounts and putting their salaries on the books would create a new revenue source for the financially strapped Palestinian Authority, while bringing a windfall in service fees for Palestinian banks GAZA: Shadi Khail, a scrap collector in the Gaza strip, was killed during Israeli airstrikes this month, leaving his mother, wife and two children destitute. “He said he was going to collect plastic and sell it and get diapers and milk for the boy. He was never back,” his wife, Asma, said in their three-room house in Gaza City. “He came in a coffin.” At least 49 people were killed during a weekend of airstrikes and rocket fire that started on Aug. 5, the worst outbreak of violence in more than a year in the volatile Gaza strip, where some 2.3 million people live blockaded in a narrow patch of land. Shadi Khail’s horse, which he used to carry the scrap metal and plastic he collected and sold for about $3 a day, was killed alongside him. BACKGROUND At least 49 people were killed during a weekend of airstrikes and rocket fire that started on Aug. 5, the worst outbreak of violence in more than a year in the volatile Gaza strip, where some 2.3 million people live blockaded in a narrow patch of land. “He (Shadi) wished he could get me a good house as other people do. He had always told me he wanted to do so and so but there is no income,” she said. Separately, tens of thousands of Palestinians employed in Israel staged a one-day strike on Sunday in protest at a decision to pay their salaries into bank accounts rather than in cash. The new payment method was agreed between Palestinian and Israeli authorities looking for a more efficient and secure way to pay salaries, but workers fear that hidden fees and new taxes will cut into their wages. About 200,000 Palestinians cross each day into Israel or Jewish settlements for work, earning on average more than twice as much as those employed by Palestinian state bodies and businesses. Most of the workers do not have bank accounts and putting their salaries on the books would create a new revenue source for the financially strapped Palestinian Authority, while bringing a windfall in service fees for Palestinian banks. Under the arrangement, salaries will be paid weekly with bank fees set at $1 per transfer, according to a number of workers. Palestinian Labour Minister Nasri Abu Jeish said the new arrangement was meant to protect workers’ rights and that there was no plan to impose new taxes. The Palestinian Authority, which has limited autonomy in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, is responsible for roughly 150,000 public sector jobs in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Its budget was $330 million for 2021 and it relies heavily on foreign donors.

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