Gaza Strip exports to Israel resumed Sunday as Israel reopened a trade crossing, days after shutting it over an alleged attempt to smuggle explosives from the Palestinian enclave.
The Kerem Shalom crossing, the only point of entry for goods between Gaza and Israel, was closed last week after the Israeli army said it found explosives hidden in a clothing delivery carried in three trucks.
Israeli army chief of staff Herzi Halevi last Monday ordered an immediate halt of all commercial deliveries from Gaza to Israel following the alleged attempt to “smuggle high-quality explosives”.
Impoverished Gaza, home to around 2.3 million Palestinians, is under a tight land, air, and sea blockade imposed by Israel, whose defense ministry controls all crossings except Rafah which is controlled by Egypt.
On Sunday morning, the Kerem Shalom gateway was reopened, said Raed Fattouh, head of the Presidential Committee for the Coordination of Goods, which is affiliated to Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas’s Fatah party.
“Several trucks, including one loaded with ready-made clothes and others loaded with scrap iron, entered the crossing this morning and headed towards the Israeli side,” he told AFP.
COGAT, the body running civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, confirmed the reopening of the crossing on Sunday at 6:00 am (0300 GMT) “following the conclusion of a security assessment”.
Palestinian businesses had warned that shutting the crossing would trigger a “humanitarian catastrophe” in the Gaza Strip.
“When the Kerem Shalom crossing is open, we have work; otherwise, we will die because we won’t be able to export our vegetables,” Atta Tabasi, an exporter of tomatoes, told AFP.
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