Gaza Strip
Inhabited since at least the 15th century B.C., the Gaza Strip has been dominated by many different peoples and empires throughout its history; it was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in the early 16th century. The Gaza Strip fell to British forces during World War I, becoming a part of the British Mandate of Palestine. Following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Egypt administered the newly formed Gaza Strip; Israel captured it in the Six-Day War in 1967. Under a series of agreements known as the Oslo accords signed between 1993 and 1999, Israel transferred to the newly-created Palestinian Authority (PA) security and civilian responsibility for many Palestinian-populated areas of the Gaza Strip as well as the West Bank. In 2000, a violent intifada or uprising began, and in 2001 negotiations to determine the permanent status of the West bank and Gaza Strip stalled. Subsequent attempts to re-start negotiations have not resulted in progress toward determining final status of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israel by late 2005 unilaterally withdrew all of its settlers and soldiers and dismantled its military facilities in the Gaza Strip, but it continues to control the Gaza Strip’s land and maritime borders and airspace. In early 2006, the Islamic Resistance Movement (HAMAS) won a majority in the Palestinian Legislative Council election. Attempts to form a unity government between Fatah, the dominant Palestinian political faction in the West Bank, and HAMAS failed, leading to violent clashes between their respective supporters and HAMAS's violent seizure of all military and governmental institutions in the Gaza Strip in June 2007. Since HAMAS’s takeover, Israel and Egypt have enforced tight restrictions on movement and access of goods and individuals into and out of the territory. Fatah and HAMAS have since reached a series of agreements aimed at restoring political unity between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank but have struggled to enact them; a reconciliation agreement signed in October 2017 remains unimplemented. In July 2014, HAMAS and other Gaza-based militant groups engaged in a 51-day conflict with Israel culminating in late August with an open-ended truce. Since 2014, Palestinian militants and the Israel Defense Forces have exchanged projectiles and air strikes respectively, sometimes lasting multiple days and resulting in multiple deaths on both sides. Egypt, Qatar, and the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process have negotiated multiple ceasefires to avert a broader conflict. Since March 2018, HAMAS has coordinated weekly demonstrations along the Gaza security fence, many of which have turned violent, resulting in one Israeli soldier death and several Israeli soldier injuries as well as more than 200 Palestinian deaths and thousands of injuries.

geography

location

31.25° N, 34. 20° E
Middle East, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between Egypt and Israel

area

360 sq km
land
360 sq km
water
0 sq km

land boundaries

72 km

coastline

40 km

climate

temperate, mild winters, dry and warm to hot summers

terrain

flat to rolling, sand- and dune-covered coastal plain

elevation

lowest point
Mediterranean Sea
0
highest point
Abu 'Awdah (Joz Abu 'Awdah)
105

natural resources

  • arable land
  • natural gas

population distribution

population concentrated in major cities, particularly Gaza City in the north

people

population

  • 1,918,221
  • 152
    global rank

nationality

  • NA
    noun
  • NA
    adjective

ethnic groups

  • Palestinian Arab

languages

  • Arabic
  • Hebrew
    spoken by many Palestinians
  • English
    widely understood

religions

Muslim -
99 %
Christian
1 %
other
%
unaffiliated
%
unspecified
1 %

birth rate

  • 28.6
    per 1,000 population
  • 37
    global rank

death rate

  • 3
    per 1,000 population
  • 225
    global rank

urban population

76.7 %

life expectancy

  • 74.9
    total population
  • 122
    global rank
73.1
male
76.7
female

government

country name

    conventional

  • none
    long form
  • Gaza Strip
    short form

    local

  • none
    long form
  • Qita' Ghazzah
    short form

economy

overview

Movement and access restrictions, violent attacks, and the slow pace of post-conflict reconstruction continue to degrade economic conditions in the Gaza Strip, the smaller of the two areas comprising the Palestinian territories. Israeli controls became more restrictive after HAMAS seized control of the territory in June 2007. Under Hamas control, Gaza has suffered from rising unemployment, elevated poverty rates, and a sharp contraction of the private sector, which had relied primarily on export markets. Since April 2017, the Palestinian Authority has reduced payments for electricity supplied to Gaza and cut salaries for its employees there, exacerbating poor economic conditions. Since 2014, Egypt’s crackdown on the Gaza Strip’s extensive tunnel-based smuggling network has exacerbated fuel, construction material, and consumer goods shortages in the territory. Donor support for reconstruction following the 51-day conflict in 2014 between Israel and HAMAS and other Gaza-based militant groups has fallen short of post-conflict needs.

agriculture products

  • olives
  • fruit
  • vegetables
  • flowers
  • beef
  • dairy products

poverty level

30%
2011

communications

telephones

    fixed lines

  • 472,293
    total subscriptions
  • 97
    global rank

    mobile cellular

  • 4,135,363
    total subscriptions
  • 128
    global rank

broadcast media

1 TV station and about 10 radio stations; satellite TV accessible

internet

.psnote - same as the West Bank
country code

    users

  • 2,673,000
    total
  • 57.4
    % of population
  • 100
    global rank

energy

electricity access

98%
2012

transportation

air transport

    airports

  • 1
    total
  • 1
    paved

military

This entry doesn't have any available military data.