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Deir el-Balah Camp |
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Tents were provided as temporary shelter for the original 9,000 refugees and these were later replaced by mud brick shelters and, in the early 1960s, by the current cement block structures. Most of the original refugees are from villages in the central and southern parts of pre-1948 Palestine. Prior to the closure of the Gaza Strip in September 2000 most of the refugees worked as labourers in Israel or locally in agriculture. Some refugees run their own shops and workshops. There is a public market every Tuesday in the camp. There was no sewerage system in the camp before 1998 when UNRWA completed the construction of a sewage pumping station and the first and second phases of a sewerage and drainage project with contributions from the Government of Japan. All shelters are supplied with water from Mekorot, the Israeli water company. In late 1997, the Palestinian Authority extended the main coastal road south between the camp and the sea. Several shelters were demolished to make way for the new road and families were given small plots of land and some money as compensation to build new shelters outside the camp. FACTS AND FIGURES
http://www.un.org/unrwa/refugees/gaza/deirelbalah.html Do you know something we don't? Added: May 2006
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