In the heart of the Shati refugee camp, machines buzz as Mohammed Abu Shanab’s employees sew small, round pieces of cloth into Jewish skullcaps for export to Israel.
It may seem an unlikely product to be made in a Palestinian enclave ravaged by Israel in three wars since 2008, but with unemployment and poverty rampant, some in Gaza will take any business they can get.
"The Israelis appreciate our products for their quality and our proximity to their market," Mr Abu Shanab said.
"On the other hand, they fear the crossings will be closed and the delivery of goods will be delayed."
Israel controls all crossings into and out of the Gaza Strip, apart from one bordering Egypt. One terminal on the Israeli border – Kerem Shalom – is designated for goods.
With about a dozen sewing machines, Mr Abu Shanab’s small factory, located near the home of Hamas’s former leader in Gaza Ismail Haniya, produces shirts and trousers as well.
But his production level is not what he would like.
He shut down when Israel imposed a blockade on the Gaza Strip in 2006, after the Islamist movement Hamas took control of territory.
The three wars that followed completely or partially took out about 50 companies in the Gaza Strip, according to industry representatives.
Mr Abu Shanab’s factory reopened only last year.
Gaza’s textile sector as a whole remains a far cry from the early 1990s, when it employed about 35,000 people in more than 900 companies.
Mr Abu Shanab, also a member of the Union of Palestinian Textile Industries, said four million pieces were sent to Israel each month at that time.
Since the blockade, the figures have fallen to 4,000 Gazans employed in the sector and about 150 companies, whose products are mainly aimed at the local market, union figures show.
About 25 of the companies export to Israel and the occupied West Bank, the other Palestinian territory separated from Gaza by Israeli territory. They send between 30,000 and 40,000 pieces each month.
Israel says the blockade is needed to prevent Hamas from importing weapons or materials that could be used to make them.
UN officials have called for the blockade to be lifted, citing deteriorating humanitarian conditions.
According to the World Bank, the blockade has caused Gaza’s exports to evaporate and badly hurt the economy of the territory of some two million people.
Hassan Shehadeh, who employs about 50 Palestinians in textile work, says he has managed to regain 20 per cent of his business since last year.
In his factory in the upscale neighbourhood of Sheikh Radwan, in the north of Gaza City, he produces jeans amid the deafening din of machines and the generators that power them through the Gaza Strip’s chronic electricity shortages.
Mr Shehadeh says he exports between 5,000 and 10,000 pairs to Israel each month.
"I could produce a lot more, but the issue of the crossings worries Israeli businessmen and hinders our work," he said.
The market is difficult within Gaza, where unemployment stands at about 45 per cent and more than two-thirds of the population depend on humanitarian aid.
"The local market is weak, while trade with Israel is very good," he said.
"We have expertise and we could export even further."
For Abdel Nasser Awad, director general in the Gaza economy ministry, exporting to Israel is "a purely commercial affair".
"All that we are interested in is boosting our economy and fighting unemployment," he said.
Source: The National
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