Palestinian Workers Strike as UN Agency Squeeze Hits Salaries

A Palestinian carries a sack of flour at a United Nations food distribution center in Al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, Wednesday. (Reuters/Mohammed Salem)

RAMALLAH (Reuters) – Schools, clinics and some municipal services in the Palestinian Authority were closed on Wednesday as workers went on strike for a third day amid an escalating funding squeeze on the United Nations agency that pays their wages.

Around 3,700 workers joined the strike, demanding an across-the-board pay increase of 200 Jordanian dinars ($281.81) a month from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).

“The strike will go on until UNWRA accepts our demands,” said Jamal Abdullah, head of the union representing workers paid by the agency.

On Tuesday, UNRWA appealed for $1.6 billion in funding for schools, healthcare and aid in Gaza, Yehuda and Shomron, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, where most Palestinian refugees or their descendants from various Arab-Israeli conflicts live.

With donations to the agency hit by crises across the world, compounded by inflation and supply chain disruptions, there was no immediate prospect of relief.

“All indications point out that it is going to be a difficult year,” said Adnan Abu Hasna, spokesman of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in Gaza City.

With health clinics closed, some 50,000 school students shut out of their classrooms, and rubbish piled up in the streets on Wednesday, the strike added to the daily struggle faced by people in deprived areas.

“Cleaners aren’t working, so garbage and dirt are piling up next to houses and stores,” said Hussein Zaid, a resident of Jalazone refugee camp outside Ramallah, where UNWRA supports a health center and two schools. “If you go into the camp, you will not be able to pass because of the dirt and garbage.”

In Gaza, the blockaded southern coastal strip run by the Islamist terror movement Hamas, there was only one brief stoppage this week but pressure mounted for humanitarian supplies that many refugees depend on for food.

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