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		Gaza flour mills ground down by Russian-Ukraine conflict
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		 [May 23, 2022] By 
		Nidal al-Mughrabi 
 GAZA (Reuters) - Three months into the 
		Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has closed off access to lower-priced 
		Black Sea wheat, owners of five mills in the Palestinian Gaza Strip are 
		feeling the heat as they try to replenish stocks.
 
 Prices have jumped by around 20%, meaning the territory's five mills are 
		struggling to compete with imported stock sold at slightly cheaper rates 
		from Egypt and the West Bank, which have lower production costs than 
		Gaza.
 
 Abdel-Dayem Abu Awwad, general director of Gaza's biggest AL-Salam Mills 
		Company, said the crisis had forced them to lay off most of their 54 
		workers and shorten working hours.
 
 
		
		 
		"Our capacity stood at 400 tonnes of wheat a day or 300 tonnes of 
		flour... Nowadays, it has fallen to (just) 10 to 20% of that," he told 
		Reuters at the facility in southern Gaza, where most of the machines 
		were switched off.
 
 A 50-kg (110 lbs) sack of flour from his mills costs 120 shekels 
		($35.91), while flour imported from neighbouring Egypt and the occupied 
		West Bank costs around 10 shekels less. Before the Ukraine conflict, a 
		sack of flour sold for 97 shekels.
 
 "The main reason is the Russian-Ukraine war. We had stores for two to 
		three months, but when they ran out we were obliged to buy wheat at new 
		prices, and it was very high," he told Reuters.
 
 Russia and Ukraine together account for nearly a third of global wheat 
		supplies and delivery disruptions caused by the war have pushed prices 
		up around the world.
 
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			Palestinian men grind wheat during harvest season on a farm in Khan 
			Younis in the southern Gaza Strip May 21, 2022. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu 
			Mustafa 
            
			
			
			 
            The crisis has coincided with the start of Gaza's own 
			wheat harvest, but the annual crop barely covers a week's demand in 
			the coastal enclave, which is home to 2.3 million people and 
			consumes up to 500 tonnes of flour a day. 
            In Mughraqa village in the central Gaza Strip, Amani 
			Ayyad, a mother-of-six, said the flour price hike was hurting.
 "Prices of cooking oil, flour and sugar all went up. We tolerated 
			the blockade and the division but what people can do when they don't 
			have food? This is a slow death," Ayyad told Reuters at her two-room 
			house.
 
 Two-thirds of Gazans are dependent on aid from the United Nations 
			Relief and Works Agency UNRWA, which includes quarterly food 
			distribution to refugee families. So far, it has maintained 
			deliveries but has called on additional funds from donor states to 
			cover surging prices.
 
 "Should UNRWA's (aid) stop or get delayed there would be a crisis 
			because refugees are dependent on it," said Samir Al-Adham, 44, a 
			father of four, speaking at a food distribution centre in Beach 
			refugee camp.
 
 ($1 = 3.3420 shekels)
 
 (Writing by Nidal Almughrabi; Editing by Crispian Balmer and Alex 
			Richardson)
 
            
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