The Gaza Strip suffered about $18.5 billion in damage to critical infrastructure in the first four months of the Israeli bombardment launched in response to the Hamas attacks, according to a joint World Bank and the UN report released yesterday.
The interim damage assessment report, which received financial support from the European Union, estimates the damages are equivalent to 97 per cent of the combined GDP of the West Bank and Gaza in 2022 and left 26 million tonnes of debris and rubble that would take years to remove.
The report details the scale of infrastructure destruction in the Israel-Gaza war and the dire state of the population in the narrow coastal enclave where health facilities have been shattered, the population is starving and aid work is hampered.
The report found that damage to structures affects every sector, with housing accounting for 72pc of the costs and public service infrastructure such as water, health, and education accounting for 19pc, according to a statement from the World Bank.
Over a million people are without homes and 75pc of the population is displaced, the World Bank said, adding that more than half the population of Gaza is on the brink of famine and the entire population is experiencing acute food insecurity and malnutrition.
“Catastrophic cumulative impacts on physical and mental health have hit women, children, the elderly, and persons with disabilities the hardest, with the youngest children anticipated to be facing life-long consequences to
their development,” the World Bank said.
Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, killing 1,200 people and taking 253 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel’s subsequent military assault on Hamas-governed Gaza has killed more than 32,000 people, according to the local health ministry, displaced nearly all of its 2.3m population, put Gaza on the brink of
starvation and led to genocide allegations that Israel denies.