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A UN human rights mission on the Gaza conflict is hearing from a
range of experts on the social and the psychological effect of
Israel's 22-day war on Gaza.
On the second of the two-day inquiry on Monday, a child psychologist
told the panel that an estimated 20 per cent of children in Gaza
suffer post-traumatic stress syndrome as a result of witnessing
violence.
Dr Iyad Sarraj said: "The amount of killing and blood that they have
seen or that their relatives have suffered from ... is a huge
amount, and this leads to negative psychological feelings, to
radicalism and a cycle of violence."
Lost
livelihoods
Al Jazeera's Sherine Tadros in Gaza, where more than half of the
population of 1.5 million people is under 18-years of age, said
Sarraj told the panel that six months after the war the trauma is
still present among children.
"During the war we spent the night with a family and we saw first
hand the kind of trauma that Dr Sarraj was talking about in terms of
the children and how frightened they were when the bombs were going
off," she said.
The panel also heard from the head of a women's group in Gaza City,
who said that most of those who died in the conflict were men,
leaving behind the women they provided a livelihood for, Tadros
said.
"Even months after the war the women are still suffering because
they have lost their livelihood and have to go out and work," she
said, adding that this was flagged up as a "major problem".
The hearing, which is being broadcast live for the public, will also
include testimony from experts on the military operation on the
Palestinian enclave.
The panel is to hold a second round of public hearings on July 6 and
7 in Geneva where it will hear from the victims of alleged
violations in Israel and the West Bank.
The UN chose the Swiss city as the venue of the second round of
hearings because the fact-finding mission did not receive permission
to enter Israel.
The public hearings were called for by Richard Goldstone, the head
of the 15-member team and previously a member of the South African
constitutional court.
The mission is due to complete a report with its findings in August.
Israeli
offensive
Israel launched its offensive against Gaza on December 27, citing
rocket attacks from the enclave that caused injuries to residents
and damage to property in Sderot and other towns.
The military operation killed more than 1,400 Palestinians,
including more than 900 civilians, among them scores of children,
according to Palestinian officials and human rights groups.
It also destroyed thousands of homes and heavily damaged Gaza's
infrastructure.
Israel says the death toll was lower and most of the dead were Hamas
fighters.
Thirteen Israelis were also killed during the fighting.
Gaza's reconstruction is being hampered by Israel's blockade of
Gaza, which dates back to June 2007 when Hamas took control of the
territory.
Since then, Israel and Egypt, which control Gaza's only border
crossing that bypasses Israel, have kept the territory of 1.5
million aid-dependent people sealed to all but essential
humanitarian supplies.
Israel has insisted that the blockade is necessary to prevent Hamas
from arming itself. Human-rights groups say it is a "collective
punishment" that wrongly hurts ordinary civilians.
The fact-finding mission is mandated by the UN to
investigate all violations of international human rights and
humanitarian laws that might have been committed at any time in the
context of the military operations conducted in Gaza.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/06/200962992241563369.html
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