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UK minister Warsi quits over Gaza

Wednesday, 6 August 2014



LONDON, Aug 5 (Agencies): UK Foreign Office minister Baroness Warsi has resigned from the government, saying its policy on the crisis in Gaza is "morally indefensible".
She wrote on her Twitter feed that she was leaving with "deep regret".
Lady Warsi, who was previously chairman of the Conservative Party, became the first female Muslim cabinet minister when David Cameron took office in 2010.
The prime minister thanked her for her "excellent work", adding that he wanted an "unconditional ceasefire" in Gaza.
Labour backed Lady Warsi's comments, but Chancellor George Osborne called her resignation "disappointing and frankly unnecessary".
Another news from  Ramallah adds, a month of fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip will cost the Palestinian territory at least $4-6 billion in damages, deputy economy minister Taysir Amro said Tuesday.
Amro told AFP the figure included only "direct damages" to the Gaza economy and warned it could climb further once additional impacts on the 1.8 million population are taken into account.
A more precise assessment would be carried out once calm returns permanently to the overpopulated sliver of territory where more than 1,850 people were killed and nearly half a million displaced, he said.
Amro said international donors were expected to meet in Norway in September, but gave no further details.
A 72-hour truce, brokered by Egypt and the United States, came into effect at 8:00 am (0500 GMT) on Tuesday as the last Israeli troops left the battered enclave.
The fighting began on July 8 and expanded into an Israeli ground offensive on July 17.
Hundreds of homes were destroyed and last week the Gaza Strip's only power plant was shelled, imposing total blackouts. The Palestinian territory, under blockade by Israel and Egypt, suffers from chronic water and power shortages.
Even before the latest fighting, Gaza suffered power cuts of eight to 12 hours a day, hampering hospitals, schools, businesses and water treatment centres.