UN gives Gaza children tablets to connect with world
The United Nations said it was helping connect Palestinian children in the blockaded Gaza Strip to the outside world by distributing tablets to hundreds of pupils.
Children make up nearly half of Gaza's population of 2.3 million. Most of them have never been able to leave the coastal territory, which is ruled by the Islamist movement Hamas.
Some 890 tablets are being handed out this week at schools run by UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, following a pilot that saw a few dozen devices given to children last year.
"We're very conscious that for children as they grow, they're going to have to be able to engage with an increasingly digitised world," Thomas White, the agency's Gaza director, said.
The 15-year blockade of the enclave led by Israel has crippled Gaza's economy, leaving 74 percent of young graduates unemployed, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.
The European Union-funded project to boost children's computer skills is seen by UNRWA as a way to increase their chances of getting a job in the growing tech sector, either locally or remotely.
This could "provide opportunities for young Gazans to make an income and get ahead," White said, standing in a school yard in Gaza City.
The project could help young Gazans go into coding, providing back office IT support for companies or customer support online, he added.
But Gazans still have to contend with frequent power cuts and internet access limited to 2G.