564 Palestinians cross into Gaza during first day of opening Rafah crossing - state agency

Wednesday 27-05-2015 01:11 PM
564 Palestinians cross into Gaza during first day of opening Rafah crossing - state agency

A Palestinian man, hoping to cross into Egypt, stands behind a fence as he waits at the Rafah crossing between Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip December 21, 2014. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa

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CAIRO, May 27 (Aswat Masriya) - Egypt opened its Rafah border crossing for the second day on Wednesday, after 564 Palestinians crossed into the Gaza Strip during the first day of opening the crossing, the state news agency MENA reported.

Egyptian authorities announced earlier this week that the crossing, which connects Egypt's Sinai to the Palestinian Gaza, will be opened in one direction, from Egypt to Gaza on Tuesday and Wednesday. 

One-thousand and eighty seven tonnes of building material entered the besieged strip through the Rafah crossing on Tuesday, MENA reported. The material will be used for rehabilitation projects in Gaza.

The densely populated Gaza strip is home to 1.8 million people and is currently recovering from destruction caused by 50 days of Israeli military operations in the summer of last year, which have left more than "96,000 homes ... damaged or destroyed," according to an assessment in December 2014 by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency.  

In October 2014, Egypt and Norway co-hosted an international donors conference on the reconstruction of the Strip in Cairo, raising around 5.4 billion dollars in donations. 

The majority of the donations were, however, stalled.

Gaza has been under siege since 2007, when resistance movement Hamas seized control of the strip. The siege makes the border crossing vital for Gazans and is currently the strip's main exit and entry point.

The Rafah crossing has been closed since October 2014, "except intermittently on 12 days, on which it was partially opened," United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a weekly report issued earlier this month. 

The shutdown of the crossing came one day after militant attacks left over 30 security personnel dead, in one of the deadliest militant operations in Egypt since a wave of insurgency rose in Egypt in mid-2013.

Last week, a top counselor at the Palestinian embassy said the opening of the border crossing is "connected to the stability of the security situation in Sinai," in a statement posted on the embassy's website.

He stressed the "necessity" of solving the "Rafah crisis" urgently, based on political solutions. 

A study by OCHA last December described the situation in Gaza as being "further compounded by the restriction imposed since 2013 by the Egyptian authorities at Rafah crossing."

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