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In Gaza, fiberglass homes aim to offer more ‘dignity’ for displaced

AFP
By
Khan-Yunus-AFP

Boys walk past the tents at a makeshift camp for displaced Palestinians in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip on April 10, 2026. (AFP)

KHAN YUNIS: In southern Gaza, aid workers are meticulously assembling fiberglass homes meant to shelter thousands of Palestinians still displaced six months after a ceasefire started between Israel and Hamas.


Nearly two million people in Gaza are living in makeshift shelters, and the humanitarian situation remains dire, according to aid agencies.

The fiberglass units are designed to offer a modicum of relief — homes with slightly more comfort than a tent vulnerable to the coastal winds that hit Gaza.


Alessandro Markic, head of the United Nations Development Programme office in Gaza, initiated the plan. He said families “are facing extremely difficult conditions.”


Roughly 4,000 units are planned in the Al-Mohararat area, west of Khan Younis.


Workers assemble walls, install small windows, and lay roofs for families who try to settle in with rugs and cushions inside.


“These are very basic and temporary solutions, while we continue to plan for recovery and reconstruction,” Markic said. The homes, he added, “provide more dignity, privacy, and protection during the winter.”


Some Gazans were visibly relieved to have an alternative to the tents where most displaced people continue to live.


Nasma Sharab has moved into one unit with her sons, and affirmed it was “better” than a tent.


The fiberglass homes “don’t constantly blow away in the wind,” she said.


But, she added, “it’s a temporary solution while we wait for reconstruction to begin and for people to be able to go back to their homes.”


Among those who remain in a tent is Ali Abu Nahl, in Beit Lahia in northern Gaza, after being displaced to the center and south of the territory with his children and grandchildren.


His house was destroyed during the devastating conflict that erupted with the Hamas attacks on Israel in October 2023.


“It’s been half a year since the bombing stopped, but in Gaza, the war doesn’t end when the strikes stop,” he said.