1. Home
  2. Middle East and North Africa
  3. Israel

What’s happening at Kerem Shalom?

Gaza authorities registering trucks entering Rafah after retrieving imports from Kerem Shalom Erica Silverman/IRIN
Kerem Shalom is currently the only entry point for commercial and humanitarian goods from Israel into Gaza, and as such has become a life-line, but how does it work?

A small crossing without the facilities to allow large numbers of trucks to enter, Kerem Shalom lies inside Israel, 3km from the Gazan town of Rafah on the Egyptian border.

The only people authorised by Israel to physically access Kerem Shalom are employees of Shaiber Company, a private Gaza company with permission from Israel to access Kerem Shalom to retrieve imports. The company declined to comment.

The Gaza authorities cannot access Kerem Shalom. Israeli truck drivers dump pallets of goods in an open area and withdraw, and then Palestinian truck drivers from Gaza enter and retrieve the goods, according to senior Hamas official Ghazi Hamad and Gaza traders.

Israeli authorities say they are using Kerem Shalom after closing the much larger and better equipped Karni crossing because of Palestinian attacks on Karni - which left several Israeli soldiers dead - several years ago.

''Kerem Shalom is completely controlled by Israel. Fifteen trucks containing carnations are the total exports from Gaza this year.''
No contact

“There is no contact between the Hamas government authorities and the Israeli authorities,” said leading Gaza customs official Mohammed Shaer, stationed at Rafah, adding: “There are still a few officials from the Palestinian Authority (PA) in Ramallah working to coordinate between the Ramallah government [in the West Bank] and Israel to allow the goods to enter Gaza.”

There is also no contact between the Gaza finance ministry and relevant ministries under the PA in Ramallah, said Shaer.

“Kerem Shalom is completely controlled by Israel,” said Al-Bayari, a field officer with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). “Fifteen trucks containing carnations are the total exports from Gaza this year.”

There is no lighting and containers are prohibited on the Palestinian side of Kerem Shalom by Israel, according to the logistics cluster led by the World Food Programme.

“We cannot operate Kerem Shalom at night. If we put lights there, snipers can use this to fire against the crossing,” Israeli Defence Ministry spokesman Shlomo Dror told IRIN.

“At Kerem Shalom there is no [physical] connection, we put all the goods in place and then the Palestinians pick them up.”

The entrance point for passengers and vehicles inside Rafah crossing on the Palestinian side
Photo: Erica Silverman/IRIN
The entrance point for passengers and vehicles inside Rafah crossing on the Palestinian side
Imports checked in Rafah


Empty Palestinian trucks are lined up from Rafah to Kerem Shalom, waiting to pick up any goods the Israeli authorities may allow through.

Once the Gazan trucks are loaded they trundle off to Rafah where Gaza government officials begin their intake process. There is no scanning equipment; officials check the documentation for each truck and its contents.

Palestinian traders pay taxes to Israel, and the Gaza government collects 14.5 percent value added tax (VAT) on the goods, Shaer said.

Gaza and the West Bank are treated as part of the same customs envelope by Israel, which collects the customs taxes and is supposed to remit them monthly to the PA in Ramallah, according to the Paris Protocol signed in conjunction with the Oslo Accords in 1994.

Import delays

A major trader in Gaza City who preferred anonymity said he was importing mainly electronics via Kerem Shalom “since shoes and clothing are not allowed to enter”.

“Products sit at the crossing for weeks, exposed to the environment,” said the trader. “The goods are often damaged and all the different pallets are thrown together on the ground. It takes at least a month for the goods to enter Gaza.”

“The government in Ramallah coordinates with the Israeli authorities so I can get pharmaceuticals into Gaza,” said Nader Shurrab, owner of Gaza Central Company, the largest pharmaceutical importer in Gaza.

Nader said it takes 4-6 weeks to schedule an appointment with the Israeli authorities to get permission for his trucks to go to Kerem Shalom to pick up his imported pharmaceuticals. “Fifty percent of the time my trucks are turned away.”

There are five crossings into Gaza - four from Israel and one from Egypt. Rafah and Erez are passenger crossings; Nahal Oz is only for fuel; the Karni conveyor belt is only for wheat and animal feed.

''Products sit at the crossing for weeks, exposed to the environment. The goods are often damaged and all the different pallets are thrown together on the ground. It takes at least a month for the goods to enter Gaza''
Thirty-two product types allowed in


As of mid-April the Israeli authorities have been allowing 32 types of products to enter Gaza, said the Palestine Trade Centre (PalTrade) in Gaza.

According to the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT - under the Israeli Defence Ministry), in April, 92 percent of goods allowed to enter Gaza via Kerem Shalom were food and hygiene products.

Construction material, spare parts, agricultural inputs including livestock, and IT equipment are on the banned list, according to OCHA

“The deliveries are disorganised and irregular, and sometimes certain products are prohibited,” said Shaer. “Shoes and wood have not entered Gaza in six months, and no livestock have entered since September 2008.”

Israeli cabinet decision

The 22 March Israeli cabinet decision to lift restrictions on food items allowed to enter Gaza has yet to be implemented, reports the logistics cluster.

However, Israeli spokesman Dror stressed security concerns: “The restrictions on the types of food allowed to enter [Gaza] have been removed, but the issue is the amount of trucks that can pass [Kerem Shalom]… There are about 50 civilian workers, including truck drivers in the [Kerem Shalom] crossing and it is much easier to protect them by day. To operate the crossing is a calculated risk... Before the recent operation [27 December 2008 to 18 January 2009] Qassams were fired [by Palestinian militants] in the area, and post-operation there has been repeated mortar-fire and sniper-fire in the area [around Kerem Shalom].”

The area inside Rafah crossing on the Palestinian side. The open door leads to scores of tunnels, located on the other side of the wall, used to smuggle basic food items and supplies from Egypt into Gaza
Photo: Erica Silverman/IRIN
The area inside Rafah crossing on the Palestinian side. The open door leads to scores of tunnels used to smuggle basic food items and supplies from Egypt into Gaza
“Massive shortages”


“The lack of imports has halted over 90 percent of Gaza industries and created massive shortages of food and basic supplies,” said Hamas’s Hamad , who failed to mention the dozens of illegal tunnels between Egypt and Gaza, which however, provide only limited supplies due in part to a clampdown by the Egyptian authorities and damage by Israeli security forces .

“Medical supplies have priority [to enter Gaza], and secondly is food from international organisations. There is a government decision not to allow a humanitarian crisis to occur in Gaza,” said Israeli spokesman Dror, adding: “The Palestinians come to us with requests [for certain imports to be allowed in] and we determine if it’s necessary - like in the case of animal feed, we permitted it to enter, although it is not absolutely necessary.”

“The Israeli authorities allow 80-110 trucks per day to enter Gaza via Kerem Shalom,” according to Hamad, though prior to June 2007, when Hamas won elections in Gaza, about 475 trucks entered Gaza from Israel daily, according to OCHA.

“In March and April, 33 percent of the trucks that entered Gaza contained humanitarian aid for the UN Relief and Works Agency [UNRWA] and other international aid organisations, and about 70 percent [of the trucks carried goods] for the private sector,” said Al-Bayari. “The amount of humanitarian aid increased after the war, and is now decreasing.”

The Israeli standpoint is somewhat different: “The amount of trucks containing humanitarian aid has been consistent in March and April. There are no shortages of humanitarian aid or other supplies in Gaza… The situation can change, but it depends on Hamas, if they recognise that caring for civilians is their responsibility,” Dror told IRIN.

es/at/cb

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

Share this article

Get the day’s top headlines in your inbox every morning

Starting at just $5 a month, you can become a member of The New Humanitarian and receive our premium newsletter, DAWNS Digest.

DAWNS Digest has been the trusted essential morning read for global aid and foreign policy professionals for more than 10 years.

Government, media, global governance organisations, NGOs, academics, and more subscribe to DAWNS to receive the day’s top global headlines of news and analysis in their inboxes every weekday morning.

It’s the perfect way to start your day.

Become a member of The New Humanitarian today and you’ll automatically be subscribed to DAWNS Digest – free of charge.

Become a member of The New Humanitarian

Support our journalism and become more involved in our community. Help us deliver informative, accessible, independent journalism that you can trust and provides accountability to the millions of people affected by crises worldwide.

Join