updated: 12.05.08
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Rehabilitation and Development Project in Gaza and the West Bank

This project is the second phase of the relief and development programme that ended in 1999. The overall project goal is to improve the living conditions and livelihood opportunities of rural communities in Gaza and the West Bank by increasing productivity, creating employment opportunities and improving access to social services. It sets out to meet immediate needs but also works towards longer-term development goals. Women have been especially affected by the closures and ensuing economic crisis, and the project particularly targets women who are alone in supporting their families to help them rebuild livelihoods. Project activities include:

  • rehabilitating and expanding essential social and physical infrastructure and services, which also provides a much-needed source of employment
  • providing women with access to savings and credit associations, training and basic equipment to help them establish or expand businesses
  • providing credit and other support services to small farmers, fishing communities and other rural enterprises

The women’s savings and credit associations component is being implemented by PARC and involves the empowerment of women through their organization, and supporting the process of group saving to provide informal financial services to provide productive and social assets and improve incomes.

The savings and credit systems launched under this project have set up 12 women’s saving and credit associations through PARC in villages in the West Bank and Gaza. By June 2006 6,986 members were organized into 135 groups under these associations, and almost 4,000 loans had been distributed for a total of about US$4.5 million. Specialized training has been provided for beneficiaries and in particular for elected members of the executive committees.

The project has also built 5 new roads in rural areas, 3 community centres, 1 village health clinic and kindergarten, and 53 new classrooms in 14 schools. The village community centres are designed to improve social life through recreational activities, women’s literacy and training classes and by providing a venue for community group meetings and activities. About 4,800 men, women and children are benefiting from the facilities. It has also rehabilitated irrigation water supplies to reduce water loss and increase the amount of water available for agriculture. Thanks to the rehabilitation of water networks in two villages, 110 households now have access to clean drinking water and no longer have to rely on water tank vehicles, which have become undependable because of road closures. All the project activities have generated employment in the target communities. They have inspired local people to continue with development plans on their own as, for instance, using their own resources to rehabilitate existing olive groves and install cisterns and water conservation systems.

 

Source: IFAD

In this section
Contact information

Mr. Mazen Dabbagh

Project coordinator

P.O. Box 19982

Jerusalem 19982

Tel: +972 2 6277076

+972 505 229866

mazen@anera-jwg.org

Facts and figures

Total cost: US$10.0 million

IFAD grant: US$3.0 million

Co-financing:

  • Arab Authority for Agricultural Investment and Development (US$900,000)
  • IFAD Trust Fund (US$400,000 million)

Duration: 2003-2008

Geographical area:

selected poor villages in Gaza and the West Bank

Directly benefiting: 8,200 households

Status: ongoing

Partners
  • American Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA)
  • Arab Authority for Agricultural Investment and Development (AAAID)
  • Ministry of Agriculture, Palestinian Authority
  • Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committees (PARC)