The destruction in the Gaza Strip after seven months of war is already on a scale that the world has not seen in almost eight decades. It will leave an immense burden on reconstruction that Arab countries are bound to carry.
Abdullah Dardari, assistant secretary-general at the United Nations, made that clear in a press conference in Amman early this month. “This is a mission that the global community has not dealt with since World War II”, he said.
He became one of many officials painting a grim picture of Gaza, as the fate of Palestinians living there remains bleak. Indiscriminate daily bombardment persists as peace talks led by Egypt and Qatar stumble, and there remains a lack of international deterrent to Israel’s military onslaught that has so far killed around 35,000 Palestinians. Apart from a shortlived pause last year to exchange hostages, Israeli strikes in Gaza have been relentless since Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel.
Monumental task
As it stands, the Gaza Strip may require $40bn—equivalent to almost all of Egypt’s foreign reserves—to be rebuilt over the course of decades, said Dardari. Around 80% of the damage occurred in the governorates of Gaza, North Gaza and Khan Yunis.
According to data collectively provided by the World Bank, the UN, and the EU, the cost of damage to critical infrastructure in the strip was estimated at around $18.5bn as of last January. This is equivalent to 97% of the combined gross domestic product of Gaza and the West Bank in 2022.
A UN report released in May says the overall rubble from the shelling is estimated at nearly 40 million tonnes in the Gaza Strip. It includes 72% of all residential buildings which have been partially or completely destroyed.
This volume of debris is larger than that in Ukraine, according to the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS), while the war there has been going on longer, since February 2022. Looking at that comparison, Mungo Birch, head of the UNMAS programme in the Palestinian territories, said: “To put that in perspective, the Ukrainian front line is 600 miles long, and Gaza is 25 miles long".
Gaza’s vital agricultural sector suffered estimated damage worth $629mn. And with Israeli authorities restricting humanitarian deliveries, Northern Gaza is suffering a “full-blown famine,” according to the United Nations World Food Programme. Other parts of the Strip have been hit by acute hunger, with water and medicines scarce, as well as food.
Some 1.9 million people—or more than 85% of Gaza’s population—have been displaced. Rafah, near the Egyptian borders, hosted around 1.5 million Palestinians up until recently. Nearly 80% of them had been displaced from other parts of the strip due to the Israeli assaults. However, since the Israeli army began its assault on Rafah, most of those displaced have fled yet again. With such a grim situation, it remains unclear what lies ahead for war-torn Gaza and its beleaguered people.
Lingering questions
A list of key questions remains. They range from when the war will end to whether there will be guarantees that violence won’t re-erupt after a peace agreement is in place. Then there is: Will Israel remain determined to obliterate Hamas? And what role, if any, will Hamas possibly play after the war?
There are also longer-term ones: Will the two-state solution be taken forward as the international community ostensibly hopes? What will the overall cost of the war be? What funds will the global community allot for the reconstruction of Gaza? And how will the Arab states contribute to this lengthy and intricate process?
The Arab world must be involved in the prelude to Gaza's reconstruction. According to Emad Gad, vice director of the Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo, only regional powers can lay the foundations of sustainable peace.
“The efforts will be sponsored by the US and EU but must be initiated by the Arab nations,” he said, adding that normalising relations with Israel, as laid out in the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, would help to fastrack global efforts to rebuild Gaza could begin.