MIFTAH
Thursday, 25 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Since the 1960’s, Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO’s) have played a key role in meeting the basic needs of the Palestinian community in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The absence of a government has left an enormous responsibility for NGO’s to provide essential services in the fields of health, education, agriculture, psychological and physical rehabilitation, community services, and economic development.

The establishment of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) in 1994 was a catalytic factor in the transformation of NGO’s from primary ‘providers’ into complementary agencies to the central role of the Palestinian public sector.

NGO’s continue to cater for 60% of primary health care services, 42% of hospitals, 90% of handicapped rehabilitation centers, and 95% of pre-school education. They serve the needs of more than one million people in the Palestinian agricultural sector, they have rescued 25,000 dunums of Palestinian land from the threat of Israeli confiscation, and they employ over 25,000 Palestinian citizens.

With the outbreak of the Palestinian Uprising (Intifada) in late September 2000, the role of NGO’s has shifted towards responding to the immediate and short-term needs of the Palestinian people across the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

In the health sector, NGO’s are playing a central role in providing first aid services to the injured and absorbing them into emergency centers, providing essential medical supplies, and appealing to the donor community for financial support to meat the needs of their medical relief process.

NGO’s are taking an equally important responsibility in providing mental health services and counseling for victims of the Intifada, an aspect which is essential to the various families (especially women and children) that are increasingly traumatized by the political, economic, and social hardships of the current crisis.

In addition, NGO’s are having to provide emergency funds to maintain various community-based centers in refugee camps and isolated areas in the Palestinian territories. This is due to the fact that users of such centers are unable to provide the necessary funds in light of the economic hardships facing the majority of the Palestinian people.

Although the mentioned services of NGO’s are indispensable and essential at this time of crisis, there is an urgent need to highlight an underlying crisis facing the general process of the NGO sector in Palestine, let alone the Palestinian nation-building process.

Since late September 2000, the majority of NGO’s in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip have had to increase their spending to meet the immediate needs of the Palestinian people in light of the ongoing crisis. Major NGO’s have been drawn to disburse significant amounts of their annual budget to swiftly meet short-term demands, raising serious doubt as to whether they will be able to sustain their regular programs in the near future.

Without the availability of regular and systematic funding, it is unlikely that NGO’s in Palestine will be able to carry out their mainstream duties, the consequences of which will have detrimental economic, political, and social effects on the Palestinian people. Thus, within the context of the current circumstances, the changing role of NGO’s into relief and short-term providers will leave serious and long-term problems.

Even an overall improvement in the political situation will leave the majority of NGO’s with significantly fewer resources than required to maintain the Palestinian development process.

The effect of this problem on Palestinian civil society is equally disturbing, since a significant number of NGO’s is directly conducive to the political structure of Palestinian society. Various NGO’s are leading the Palestinian quest to promote pluralism, rule of law, democracy and human rights in the Palestinian territories. Therefore, a shortfall in the capacity of such institutions will have direct and detrimental effects on the general process of Palestinian political development and the fostering of civil society.

This problem reinforces the need for Israel to end its occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and to pave the way for the Palestinian nation-building process to continue undisturbed, in order to ensure peace and security for both sides of the conflict.

Equally, there is an urgent need for the international community to realize the importance of sustaining the NGO sector in Palestine, and to take concrete and immediate steps to ensure the continuity of this indispensable aspect of the Palestinian nation-building process.

 
 
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