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The date,
understandably, is
etched on his mind.
“Our last delivery
of raw materials
from Israel was on
28 August, 2007,’
says Rafat Redaisi.
“But for more than a
year now the imports
we need have been
banned. Before the
closure [of Gaza] we
used to buy a ton of
raw plastic for
$2,500. Now we’re
forced to rely on
the black market –
and we have to pay
twice as much for
the plastic.”
Rafat Redaisi is
Head of Marketing
and Sales at the
Badreddin El-Redaisi
& Partners
polystyrene and
plastics factory in
Gaza city, the
largest plastics
manufacturer in the
Gaza Strip. The
factory opened more
than two decades
ago, and until
recently there were
sixty five full time
staff, plus another
thirty five at
several other
smaller subsidiary
workshops and
factories owned by
the same company.
But the workforce
has now been halved,
and the remaining
staff have had their
hours cut back. “Our
problem is we don’t
have enough raw
materials to work
with” says Rafat
Redaisi. “We have an
order of four
hundred and twenty
tons of plastic and
polystyrene waiting
over the border, in
Ashkelon [in
Israel]: it has been
in storage there for
more than a year,
because we can’t get
permission to bring
the materials across
the border into Gaza
– but we still have
to pay storage fees:
so instead of making
money, we are losing
it.”
Redaisi says plastic
and polystyrene are
in such short supply
in Gaza that his
staff have been
forced to ask
customers to supply
their own raw
materials for the
factory to
manufacture into
finished plastic and
polystyrene
products. Badreddin,
El-Redaisi &
Partners have also
been forced to
drastically cut down
on the variety of
items they produce;
going from almost a
hundred different
types of plastic and
polystyrene
containers and
packaging to half a
dozen basic models,
including water
carriers and olive
oil containers.
The Gaza Strip has
six border
crossings, five of
which are directly
controlled by
Israel. The sixth
crossing, at Rafah
on the Egyptian
border, has been
almost continually
closed since June
2006. Israel
therefore controls
the movement of
goods into and out
of Gaza. Its illegal
siege and closure of
the Gaza Strip has
included mass
restrictions on
imports and exports,
including imports of
vital raw materials
for the
construction,
manufacturing,
textile and
furniture
industries, as well
exports of
manufactured
products. Chronic
shortages of vital
raw materials, plus
the continuing
widespread ban on
exports from Gaza to
the outside world,
have both been major
factors in the near
collapse of the
Gazan economy.
Between June
2007-2008,
approximately 42,000
Gazan construction
workers lost their
jobs due to the
Israeli ban on
imports of
construction
materials, and the
construction sector
sustained overall
losses estimated at
$58 million. Out of
120 registered
construction
companies across the
Gaza Strip, just
five are still
operating. During
the same period,
wood and furniture
manufacturers and
retailers sustained
losses of around
$110 million,
forcing 600 local
furniture workshops
and factories to
close. In addition,
624 textile and
clothing workshops
and factories have
also shut down, at
the cost of more
than 25,000 local
jobs. Many of these
furniture and
textile workshops
and factories were
small, family run
businesses, which
supported and
employed entire
extended families.
Prevented from
traveling outside
Gaza, local people
have no viable work
alternatives, and
unemployment, and
chronic poverty,
have subsequently
spiraled.
Forty five percent
of working age
adults in the Gaza
Strip are now
officially
unemployed, and Gaza
has de-developed
into one of the most
aid dependent
communities on
earth. Investors
have been forced to
either suspend or
else simply cancel
projects, including
major reconstruction
projects, due to
lack of raw
materials. Overall
investment in Gaza
from donors and
corporations has
dropped from $250
million in 2005 to a
current estimate of
approximately $10
million.
The Tahdiya,
or ‘Period of Calm’
agreed between
Israel and Gaza on
19 June this year
has made precious
little difference to
the stunted economy
of the Gaza Strip.
The Israeli
Occupation Forces (IOF)
have permitted the
entry of limited
amounts of
construction
materials, like
concrete and
aggregate, to enter
Gaza in the last
three and a half
months; but other
materials, including
plastics,
polystyrene and
textiles remain
either banned or
else available only
in miniscule
amounts. The IOF
continue to hold the
entire Gazan economy
hostage, forcing
manufacturers to
turn to the
now-thriving black
market in order to
obtain basic raw
materials at
inflated prices so
they can stay in
business.
“We need about 30
tons of raw
materials a month to
run the factory at
full capacity” says
Rafat Redaisi as he
shows us around the
factory floor and
adjoining warehouse.
“This is one of the
busiest times of the
year because of the
olive harvest, so we
need even more raw
materials to make
the olive oil
containers. But now
we are buying
ready-made
containers from
Israel, and just
selling them on,
because we can’t
make our own
products.” As Israel
profits from its
illegal siege of
Gaza, Rafat and his
colleagues are
desperately trying
to keep the factory
open. He invites us
to see the almost
empty two-storey
warehouse, with its
straggle of finished
products waiting to
be delivered across
the Gaza Strip.
“More than a year
ago, this warehouse
was full of
manufactured goods”
he says. “But now we
have so much empty
space in here, we
can play football.”
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