UNDP’s Programme of Assistance
to the Palestinian People
Proposed Emergency Response
to the Gaza Crisis
November 2023
The war in Gaza is a “crisis of humanity”. The entire population of 2.2 million of Palestinians in Gaza are now in
critical need of aid. More than 10,000 people have been killed, and thousands more have been injured. Since the
beginning of the war, more than 1.5 million Gazans have fled their homes and have become internally displaced. As
is often the case in conflicts, the most vulnerable civilians, and in particular women, children, and persons with
disabilities, bear the heaviest brunt. Homes, hospitals, schools and other critical services infrastructure have been
reduced to rubble. In the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, the security situation has been rapidly deteriorating
as well. The number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank in one month since 7 October accounts for more than
one-third of all Palestinian fatalities in the West Bank in 2023.
According to the latest UNDP/ESCWA rapid assessment, “The Gaza War: Expected Socio-Economic Impacts on the
State of Palestine”, the war in Gaza has already caused massive loss of life and infrastructure damage. These losses
will have short- and long-term socioeconomic consequences, long-term deprivation, and a reduction in human
development that is propagating to the whole of the occupied Palestinian territory.
If the war goes on, by the end of the second month:
POVERTY RATE
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC LOSSES
Increase
by 34%
Set back by 16 years
in the oPt and 19 years in Gaza
Would mount to
US$1.7 billion
UNDP/PAPP Planned Response to the Gaza Crisis
UNDP/PAPP has been operating in Gaza since 1989 and has proven expertise in rapidly deploying
emergency response and early recovery interventions in the aftermath of repeated escalations of
hostilities (e.g., 2008-2009, 2014, 2021, 2023). At present, as the war is ongoing and there is
continued heavy bombardment throughout Gaza, only lifesaving activities are feasible. UNDP’s full
emergency response will be scaled up as soon as the security and operational environment allows.