86% of Asylum Seekers Suffer Food Insecurity Under Zionist Regime: Report
WEST BANK (Dispatches) – The coronavirus pandemic has pushed asylum seekers in south Tel Aviv in the occupied territories into "genuine hunger,” an official survey found, as experts said there is a "severe humanitarian crisis”, Anadolu Agency reported.
According to the Israeli daily Haaretz on Friday, unemployment due to the coronavirus pandemic had driven 86% of asylum seekers into "genuine hunger”, which matches the descriptions of both the asylum seekers themselves and aid organizations.
The findings of the survey were shown to senior officials from the health, education, judiciary affairs and social affairs ministries as well as the Tel Aviv municipality.
"In any other population group, findings like these would spark an emergency campaign by agencies,” an occupying regime official said.
According to Haaretz, the ministry of judiciary affairs said it was "aware of and troubled by” the asylum seekers’ situation and is "making every effort to help them.”
The Health Ministry also said a professional committee was discussing possible solutions and that the regime was committed to helping, "within the existing budgetary limitations.”
The Tel Aviv municipality claimed it had launched an emergency fund and solicited donations to finance food vouchers, food packages, and would continue to try "to find solutions that could ease the foreign community’s situation.”
Some 40,000 people with no status in the occupied territories live in Tel Aviv. Of these, around 6,500 are minors. The number of people seeking help from Mesila, an aid agency in the occupied territories, has doubled.
Since the pandemic began, Mesila has distributed over 10,000 food vouchers and 3,750 food packages, but these are far from meeting the needs.
According to the Israeli daily Haaretz on Friday, unemployment due to the coronavirus pandemic had driven 86% of asylum seekers into "genuine hunger”, which matches the descriptions of both the asylum seekers themselves and aid organizations.
The findings of the survey were shown to senior officials from the health, education, judiciary affairs and social affairs ministries as well as the Tel Aviv municipality.
"In any other population group, findings like these would spark an emergency campaign by agencies,” an occupying regime official said.
According to Haaretz, the ministry of judiciary affairs said it was "aware of and troubled by” the asylum seekers’ situation and is "making every effort to help them.”
The Health Ministry also said a professional committee was discussing possible solutions and that the regime was committed to helping, "within the existing budgetary limitations.”
The Tel Aviv municipality claimed it had launched an emergency fund and solicited donations to finance food vouchers, food packages, and would continue to try "to find solutions that could ease the foreign community’s situation.”
Some 40,000 people with no status in the occupied territories live in Tel Aviv. Of these, around 6,500 are minors. The number of people seeking help from Mesila, an aid agency in the occupied territories, has doubled.
Since the pandemic began, Mesila has distributed over 10,000 food vouchers and 3,750 food packages, but these are far from meeting the needs.