Tag: Oxfam

Oxfam Condemns Israel for Pushing Gazans Into a ‘Death Trap’

Displaced Palestinians leave Khan Younis

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Oxfam Condemns Israel for Pushing Gazans Into a ‘Death Trap’

Famine risk increases as Israel makes Gaza aid response virtually impossible – Oxfam – » The Australian Independent Media Network

  • A food survey by aid agencies in May found that 85 per cent of children did not eat for a whole day at least once in the three days before the survey was conducted, with dietary diversity worsening.
  • Living conditions are so appalling that in Al-Mawasi, there are just 121 latrines for over 500,000 people – or 4,130 people having to share each toilet.
  • Just 19 per cent of the 400,000 litres of fuel a day needed to run the humanitarian operation in Gaza – including transportation, the provision of clean water and sewage removal – is being allowed in and is not delivered every day.
  • According to the UN, aid deliveries have dropped by two-thirds since Israel’s invasion of Rafah. Since 6 May, just 216 trucks of humanitarian aid entered via Kerem Shalom and were able to be collected – an average of eight a day
  • It’s estimated that hundreds of commercial food trucks are entering daily via the Kerem Shalom crossing. Although important for increasing food availability in Gaza, the consignments include items like non-nutritious energy drinks, chocolate and cookies, and food is often sold at inflated prices that people cannot afford. Lack of dietary diversity is one of the key drivers of acute malnutrition and has been assessed as ‘extremely critical’ in Gaza
  • People are paying nearly $700 for the most basic tents and there is so little space left, that some have been forced to set up tents in the cemetery at Deir al-Balah

Source: Famine risk increases as Israel makes Gaza aid response virtually impossible – Oxfam – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Oxfam reaction to the Dutch court’s decision to stop military exports to Israel – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Oh Shit and I gave the Dutch Government the credit thank you OXFAM

Oxfam Novib, together with PAX, and the Rights Forum organisations, has won a lawsuit against the Dutch Government for exporting arms to Israel that are being used in the war in Gaza. The Dutch Court ordered the government of Netherlands to stop supplying F35 fighter jet parts to Israel within seven days, due to the clear risk of serious violations of international humanitarian law. The decision comes following the three organisations’ appeal to the court case against the Dutch government for supplying Israel with military equipment despite knowing they are used to commit war crimes in Gaza. The judge concluded, based on reports from Amnesty and the UN, that many civilians, including children, are being targeted.

Source: Oxfam reaction to the Dutch court’s decision to stop military exports to Israel – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Oxfam: UNSC’s failure to call for a ceasefire “utterly callous” – » The Australian Independent Media Network

In reaction to the UN Security Council’s passing of a watered-down resolution instead of calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, Oxfam Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, Sally Abi-Khalil said: “The failure to call for a ceasefire after five days of deliberate delays and dilutions of the resolution is incomprehensible, and utterly…

Source: Oxfam: UNSC’s failure to call for a ceasefire “utterly callous” – » The Australian Independent Media Network

1 per cent of the world will own more than half its wealth by 2016, Oxfam report says The World Today : Abbott governs for the 1%

Inequality, unemployment to soar says UN, Oxfam

“The actual global checks and balances that might have once achieved the kind of reasonable equality that occurred after the Second World War have broken down; they’re not coping with the kind of way that business is down by the very fast moving global economy, by the sort of digital world that we live in one way or the other,” she said.

Oxfam said it would call for action to tackle rising inequality at the Davos meeting, which starts on Wednesday, including a crackdown on tax dodging by corporations and progress towards a global deal on climate change.

“The reason that this should be raised at a forum like Davos, is that inevitably with the concentration of wealth comes the concentration of power, and what we need are governments to be operating in the interests of the poorest as well as the richest,” Dr Szoke said.

“At the moment in our domestic context, and in many other contexts, [the burden of tax] falls on labour and consumption. We’re saying if you have this concentration of wealth, we really need to look at capital and wealth tax.

“So, stop the dodging, make sure that there are fair taxes that are paid by people, but then we also need to look actually look at how those taxes are used, and that really goes back to the issues of what are the social structures that are put in place that are the safety net

for people across the world, like a minimum income guarantee.

“Horrifyingly, we are a long way off that.”

Unemployment to rise by 11 million: UN

Meanwhile, the United Nations has warned that unemployment will rise by 11 million in the next five years due to slower growth and turbulence.

More than 212 million people will be jobless by 2019 against the current level of 201 million, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) said.

“The global economy is continuing to grow at tepid rates and that has clear consequences,” ILO head Guy Ryder said in Geneva.

“The global jobs gap due to the crisis stands at 61 million jobs worldwide,” he said, referring to the number of jobs lost since the start of the financial crisis in 2008.

The ILO World Employment and Social Outlook – Trends 2015 report said an extra 280 million jobs would have to be created by 2019 to close the gap created by the financial turmoil.

“This means the jobs crisis is far from over and there is no place for complacency,” Mr Ryder said.

The job scenario improved in the United States, Japan and Britain but remained worrisome in several developed economies of Europe, the report said.

“The austerity trajectory… in Europe in particular has contributed dramatically to increases in unemployment,” Mr Ryder said.

The report said eurozone powerhouse Germany could see unemployment rise to 5 per cent in 2017 against 4.7 per cent at present, while it was expected to fall just under the double-digit in number two eurozone economy France.

The worst-hit segment globally were those aged between 15 and 24, with the youth unemployment rate touching 13 per cent last year, almost three times the rate for adults.

The UN agency said the steep fall in oil and gas prices would hit the labour market hard in producing countries in Latin America, Africa and the Arab world.

But one of the rare bits of good news was that the middle class comprised more than 34 per cent of total employment in developing countries from 20 per cent in the 1990s, Mr Ryder said.

However, extreme poverty continues to affect one out of 10 workers globally who earn less than $1.50 a day, he added.