KJ ReportsKJ Reports

Gaza Ramadhan 2017 in Pictures

28 May 2017768

Listen to this article

KJ narrates this report in his own voice

Gaza Ramadhan 2017 in Pictures

The month of Ramadan comes this year accompanied by a variety of crises, and in circumstances not previously known.

Along with the electricity crisis and the crisis of the salaries of PA employees being cut by 30-45 per cent, there are further problems with the cessation of medical supplies and the subsequent sanctions on the Gaza Strip, including the closure of the Rafah crossing with Egypt.

Gaza’s unemployment rate has reached 41 per cent, approximately 200,000 people of working age in the Gaza Strip, during the first quarter of 2017. These statistics and figures are attributed to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics and to the reports of the International Labour Organisation.

A series of bad conditions continue to haunt breadwinners this month, who are now shy of family members whom they support due to their concern over how they will buy goods and necessary items throughout Ramadan in a manner just like Muslims all over the world.

Family heads may not be able to buy the Ramadan lanterns for their children who may be deprived of the joy and the atmosphere of the ordinarily special month.

This atmosphere is clearly reflected in the shops, which reported a decrease in consumer purchasing power which reduced the volume of purchases due to the current situation and the lack of political clarity and stability.

Images by MEMO Photographer Mohammed Asad.

#gaza-occupation#gaza-ramadhan#palestine#palestine-occupation

Related Intelligence

More articles
The Hollow Pillar: Why Tehran’s Internal Decay Trumps Proxy Power
Middle East

The Hollow Pillar: Why Tehran’s Internal Decay Trumps Proxy Power

Iran’s sprawling ‘Axis of Resistance’ offers a façade of regional dominance. Yet, a widening rift between the clerical elite and a disillusioned populace transforms every foreign intervention into a domestic liability, eroding the Islamic Republic’s ultimate deterrent.

9 Jul 2026

The Escort Trap: Unifying the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf
Middle East

The Escort Trap: Unifying the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf

NATO’s permanent naval deployment in the Strait of Hormuz has effectively dissolved the geographic distinction between European and Middle Eastern security, creating a single, interlocking conflict theatre from Gibraltar to the Arabian Sea.

8 Jul 2026

The Swiss Conduit: Doha and Islamabad’s New Security Architecture
Middle East

The Swiss Conduit: Doha and Islamabad’s New Security Architecture

A quiet structural shift has transformed Qatar and Pakistan into the indispensable intermediaries of the Middle East. By leveraging geography and intelligence depth, this new axis is managing volatility that traditional Western diplomacy can no longer touch.

28 Jun 2026

The Anatolian Bridgehead: Why Türkiye is the Pivot of the 2026 Order
Middle East

The Anatolian Bridgehead: Why Türkiye is the Pivot of the 2026 Order

As the global architecture fractures into competing blocs, Ankara has transformed from an erratic NATO outlier into the indispensable arbiter of Eurasian logistics, energy security, and regional containment.

27 Jun 2026

The Gulf Restoration: Abu Dhabi’s Strategic Decoupling
Middle East

The Gulf Restoration: Abu Dhabi’s Strategic Decoupling

The UAE’s 14-Point Pact and aggressive production capacity expansion have fundamentally altered the relationship between oil and regional chaos. For the first time, Abu Dhabi has ensured its economic survival no longer depends on regional peace.

26 Jun 2026

The Iranian Chokepoint: Why $200 Oil is Tehran’s Strategic Veto
Middle East

The Iranian Chokepoint: Why $200 Oil is Tehran’s Strategic Veto

As regional tensions escalate, Iran’s ability to throttle the Strait of Hormuz has transformed from a military threat into a sophisticated macroeconomic weapon designed to neutralise Western sanctions and leverage global energy markets.

16 Jun 2026