The Palestinian Authority has unveiled a three-stage plan for rebuilding the Gaza Strip at an investment of $67 billion over five years. Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa said that in the first phase, $3.5 billion would be required for immediate humanitarian needs and critical infrastructure. After that, the second phase would last three years and would invest $30 billion, and only in the third and final phase would work be done to complete the reconstruction of the extensive destruction in Gaza as a result of the two-year war.
The plan presented by Mustafa is based on a UN report from last February, which estimated the cost of the damage in the Gaza Strip at about $70 billion. An investigation conducted last week by the BBC’s Fact-Checking Department, based on satellite images, found that the extent of the destruction could require in excess of 60 million tons of debris to be evacuated, even before actual reconstruction begins.
“The level of destruction in the area now stands at 84%,” says UN Development Agency envoy for Palestinian affairs Jaco Cilliers. “In certain areas of Gaza, for example Gaza City, this rises to 92%.” According to the Gaza Municipality, about 90% of the roads have also been damaged.
Mustafa says that talks are underway between Ramallah and international partners regarding the reconstruction process, while it also aims to regain control of the Gaza Strip. “We are working day and night to restore control over the territory,” the Palestinian prime minister claims, even though on the ground Hamas internal security forces have been redeployed, and are executing suspects charged with alleged collaboration with Israel.
Dr. Ido Zelkovitz, an expert on Palestinian affairs and head of the Middle East Studies program at Yezreel Valley College, and a researcher at Haifa University, says “The Palestinian Authority has no ability to rehabilitate itself. It is a regional actor that is trying to rely on the Saudis and the UAE, in order to take part in the Trump plan. Ramallah is itself facing a severe economic crisis, following the failure to transfer funds from Israel.”
Most of the Palestinian Authority’s economy relies on overseas donations
Dr. Zelkovitz stresses that most of the Palestinian Authority’s economy relies on overseas donations, which are aimed at maintaining a bloated public sector. “The situation in Ramallah is evident from the fact that salaries for its staff have been cut consistently over the past year and a half. Even now, after the latest cut has resulted in many Palestinian Authority officials receiving about half their salaries, they still continue to come to work to try and maintain a minimum level of state functioning. A function that is required from Ramallah’s perspective, in order to try to present itself to the international community as a legitimate state actor.”
RELATED ARTICLES
Turkey seen playing double post-war role
Is normalization with Saudi Arabia closer or further away?
Hamas terrorists continue to commit their crimes against the residents of the Gaza Strip, with destruction all around them. The UN Satellite Center (UNOSAT) estimates that about 282,000 homes and apartments in the Gaza Strip have been damaged or destroyed. At the same time, according to UNICEF, more than 70% of the water and sanitation infrastructure has been damaged, and energy is almost nonexistent. The Gaza Strip was built on receiving energy from Israel and fuel flows from outside, which stopped during the war. In contrast, Hamas backed up many tunnels with solar panels that continue to pump energy.
The future of the Gaza Strip is also shrouded in uncertainty. Analysis by Prof He Yin of Kent State University, reported by the BBC found that across the Gaza Strip, 82.4% of annual crops and more than 97% of tree crops were likely to have suffered damage during the war up to 10 August this year. In addition, widely discredited UNRWA claimed that about 91.8% of the 288 schools it operated in the Gaza Strip had been damaged. Therefore, both in terms of livelihood and education, a prolonged and complicated reconstruction is expected.
Qatar and Turkey – two countries that are not waiting for Hamas to give up power in the Gaza Strip – are leading the charge for reconstruction, perhaps even preferring to “push” aid to the Gaza Strip in order to establish a fait accompli that their terrorist friends in Hamas will remain in control.
In Turkey, the Erdogan regime rushed to turn on the propaganda machine over the weekend to complain about the blocking of Turks from entering the Gaza Strip. The public broadcasting corporation TRT, which operates in Israel from a Jerusalem bureau, reported that 81 “Turkish aid workers and AFAD rescue agency personnel” are waiting at the Rafah crossing.
Dr. Yoel Guzansky, who previously coordinated the handling of Iran and the Gulf at the National Security Council and currently serves as a senior researcher and head of the Gulf program at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) at Tel Aviv University, says that the current situation in the Gaza Strip is worse than before October 7, because while Israel previously was used to Qatar, now both Qatar and Turkey are involved there, within the framework of a US umbrella for the ceasefire agreement.
“Right now, things are moving in a bad direction,” Dr. Guzansky adds. “Turkey and Qatar, so to speak, are coming without preconditions, unlike the Saudis and the UAE, who sent low-ranking officials to the Sharm el-Sheikh conference due to their dissatisfaction. The Saudis want the Palestinian Authority in Gaza, or a broad regional solution. The UAE wants a reformed Palestinian Authority and a political horizon, the kind that is difficult to see in the current government. My fear is that we are going to see the Qataris and Turks in the Gaza Strip with a worse situation than before the war.”
Qatar and Turkey are interested in Hamas as sovereign
According to dr. Guzansky, Qatar and Turkey are interested in Hamas as sovereign, and therefore are acting in strict coordination. “The Qataris and Turks told Hamas, ‘Let’s sign a ceasefire agreement, and we will dissolve it in Phase II.'” Hamas wanted the war to stop, and now with each passing day, Hamas is getting stronger. Time is working in Hamas’s favor. It is true that the Qataris are wealthy, but they are more pragmatic thanks to US influence. Turkey has an anti-Semitic leader in every sense of the word, who aspires to lead the Middle East. Israel should not allow any Turks to enter the Gaza Strip. If bulldozers are needed, then let them enter with the Egyptians.”
In an attempt to protect the interests of the West and prevent Qatar and Turkey from restoring “order” in the Gaza Strip to the situation that existed before October 7th or even worse, as Dr. Guzansky warns, the UK, Egypt and the Palestinian Authority last week convened senior private sector officials at Wilton Park, an executive agency of the UK Foreign Office, to bring investment to the devastated Gaza Strip.
“The scale of the destruction makes clear the immediate need for solutions,” a joint statement said. “Rebuilding Gaza will cost tens of billions of dollars, and will require funding and active participation from the private sector. Discussions have made significant progress in identifying ways to generate private financing, while placing Palestinians at the front and center of recovery and reconstruction efforts.”
Published by Globes, Israel business news – en.globes.co.il – on October 19, 2025.
© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2025.