Gazans count cost of war

Gazans count cost of war

Palestinians returning to their neighborhoods have begun to unearth the true scale of destruction left by Israel's 22-day offensive on the Gaza Strip.

 
The devastation being unveiled comes as Israeli troops continued to pull back from some key points in Gaza towards the border and as the fragile ceasefires declared separately by the Israelis and Palestinians continued to hold on Tuesday.
 
Israeli army radio quoted unnamed military officials as saying that troops would pull out of Gaza by the time Barack Obama, the US president-elect, takes office on Tuesday.
 
Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, is also set to survey the destruction in a trip to Gaza during the day.
 
Estimates for the rebuilding of Gaza's devastated infrastructure have been put at billions of dollars.
 
Dire situation
 
John Holmes, the UN humanitarian chief, says hundreds of millions of dollars in emergency aid supplies will be needed for the people of Gaza.
 
Although 100,000 people had running water restored in their homes as of Sunday, 400,000 were still without it, Holmes said.
 
Electricity in Gaza is available for less than half the day and about 100,000 people have been displaced by the war.
 
Despite the three-week Israeli onslaught that killed more than 1,300 Palestinians and destroyed thousands of buildings, Hamas and other Palestinian factions claimed victory in the fighting.
 
Israel had said the aim of its operations in Gaza was to cripple Hamas's ability to launch rockets into the south of the country.
 
But Abu Obeida, a spokesman for Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas's armed wing said the group's rocket-launching capacity had not been diminished, and threatened to renew fighting if Israeli forces did not withdraw.
 
"They [Israel] say they weakened Hamas. We assure you that what we have lost in this war is nothing compared to what we [still] have," he said in a televised news conference on Monday.
 
Abu Obeida vowed that Hamas would replenish its arsenal of rockets and other weapons, in defiance of any Israeli or international efforts to cut off smuggling routes.
 
"Do whatever you want, bringing in and manufacturing the holy weapons is our mission, and we know how to acquire weapons," he said.
 
Disease fears
 
Meanwhile, scores of bodies have been discovered in the rubble of destroyed buildings since the fighting was halted.
 
Abed Sharafi, an ambulance driver, said on Monday that he had helped pull out the bodies of 15 children and women from under their house.
 
"They were so badly decomposed that we couldn't distinguish boys from girls. Some had been there for 15 days," he said.
 
Al Jazeera's Ayman Mohyeldin, reporting from Gaza City, said the World Health Organization was warning of an outbreak of disease with bodies now several weeks old and sewage flowing over many areas because of the destruction to infrastructure.
 
The deposed Hamas-led government in Gaza estimates that more than 5,000 buildings were completely destroyed and 20,000 damaged or partially destroyed in the fighting.
 
PHOTO CAPTION
 
A Palestinian man sits on a bed amid the rubble of his destroyed house on the outskirts of Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip.
 
Al-Jazeera
 

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