The restriction of supply quantity of goods that are allowed to enter Gaza, according to the question: 25% (approximately 2,500 trucks per month against 10,400 before June 2007)
Supplies of diesel fuel that is allowed to enter Gaza, in relation to requirements: 65% (2.2 million liters per week against the 3.5 needed to produce electricity)
Duration Average interruption in the supply of electricity to Gaza: 5 hours per day
number of people without access to running water in Gaza: 28,000
comparisons and comparisons
number of items of food in the resolution of the Israeli government has promised to enter Gaza: unlimited
Number of food items which currently are allowed to enter Gaza: 18
Amount of money pledged for reconstruction aid from the donors conference in March 2009: $ 4.5 billion
Quantity of construction materials allowed into Gaza: Zero
unemployment rate in Gaza in 2007, when the blockade was imposed:
30% unemployment rate in Gaza in 2008: 40%
No development, no prosperity, only goods "minimum humanitarian" permitted entry
The Israeli army allows the entry of margarine in small individual packages, but not stored in large containers of margarine because it could be used for industry (eg companies food, thus producing jobs)
The Israeli government has clarified the strict interpretation of the measure March 22, 2009, which allowed the unrestricted entry of food supplies into Gaza and that the government "does not intend to remove the restrictions imposed before the entry of food and supplies into Gaza." Translation: the food supplies remain limited.
Among foodstuffs which enter Gaza is prohibited include: Halva (sweet made of semolina pasta), tea and fruit juices.
Among non-food items whose entry into Gaza is prohibited include: footballs, guitars, paper and ink.
A people trapped
Number of days when the Rafah crossing is opened for normal traffic: Zero
number of people every month is not able to cross Rafah: 39,000
criterion for transition to the Erez crossing: exceptional humanitarian cases
Source http://dgibril-abdelghami.blogspot.com/
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