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News ID: 103702
Publish Date : 15 June 2022 - 21:32

NGO: 80% of Gaza Children Suffer Depression After 15 Years of Blockade

GAZA CITY (AFP) – Four out of five children in Gaza suffer from emotional distress, Save the Children said Wednesday, 15 years after the Zionist regime slapped a strict blockade on the Palestinian territory.
The occupying regime imposed the measure in June 2007. The regime, and Egypt, continue to severely restrict the flow of people and materials in and out.
In a report called “Trapped”, Britain-based Save the Children said the mental health of Gazan children has continued to deteriorate.
Since 2018, the number of reporting symptoms of “depression, grief and fear,” had risen from 55 percent to 80 percent, the report said.
Save the Children’s director for the occupied Palestinian territories, Jason Lee said: “The children we spoke to for this report described living in a perpetual state of fear, worry, sadness and grief, waiting for the next round of violence to erupt, and feeling unable to sleep or concentrate.
“The physical evidence of their distress –- bedwetting, loss of ability to speak or to complete basic tasks -– is shocking and should serve as a wakeup call to the international community,” he added.
Children make up nearly half of Gaza’s population of 2.1 million. Around 800,000 young people in the territory who have “never known life without the blockade,” Save the Children said.
The occupying regime has fought four wars with Palestinians in Gaza since 2007, most recently in May 2021.
The blockade remains broadly unchanged, with Palestinians generally barred from leaving Gaza through the Erez crossing.
Gazans also face huge obstacles exiting through the Rafah crossing to Egypt.
In a statement marking the anniversary of the blockade, Human Rights Watch said that “Israel, with Egypt’s help, has turned Gaza into an open-air prison”.
HRW’s director for Palestine, Omar Shakir, told AFP: “Young people face the brunt of (the blockade) because they don’t know of a Gaza before the closure.
“Their horizons are forcibly narrowed to a 40 by 11 kilometer strip of land and that prevents them from the chance to interact and engage with the world,” Shakir said.