Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Seeking to raise funds, Hamas raises taxes in Gaza Strip

Costs on packaged nuts are set to increase, in addition to toilet paper.

A nuts vendor at the Machane Yehuda open-air market in Jerusalem on a summer afternoon, on July 27, 2016. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.
A nuts vendor at the Machane Yehuda open-air market in Jerusalem on a summer afternoon, on July 27, 2016. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.

The Hamas terror organization in the Gaza Strip imposed new taxes on imported clothing and office supplies, sparking limited but rare protests in the impoverished coastal strip with an unemployment rate near 50%.

The Ministry of Economy has proposed taxes on packaged nuts with an import tariff of 2,000 shekels (nearly $600) per ton, reported the AP. Nuts were previously tax-free when imported. The duty on a ton of toilet paper increased from $90 to $580.

The tax hikes are set to take effect on Aug. 1.

The move comes at a time when Gaza’s 2.3 million residents suffer not only from a 15-year Israeli-Egyptian blockade but also from a new price increase caused by global supply-chain issues and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine at the end of February.

Protests against Hamas are uncommon and frequently met with force. But according to the report, about two-dozen members of the clothing merchants’ union expressed their displeasure in public earlier this month.

Morton Klein, national president of the Zionist Organization of America, told JNS that the memorandum of understanding is a “disaster” that “stabs Israel in the back.”
“You can’t send an 18-year-old off to college without filling in many blanks before they leave, about why being Jewish is important,” the longtime Jewish communal leader told JNS.
“I am the one always encouraging students to get comfortable with opposing ideas,” a professor at Seattle Central College told JNS. “This is not it.”
“The defendant exploited the barbaric acts of terror perpetrated on Oct. 7, 2023, to attract donors to his fraudulent ‘humanitarian’ causes,” the U.S. Justice Department alleged.
A transcript of the deal’s text read aloud by a senior U.S. official in a call with reporters on June 17.
“Am I going to say I’m going to take you to court?” the U.S. president told reporters at the G7 summit in France. “No, we’re going to bomb the hell out of them if they violate the agreement.”