Key Points
- The Gaza Strip is a 12km-wide enclave between Israel and the Mediterranean Sea.
- In about half the area of Canberra live an estimated 2.1 million people.
- Its population density is 6,507 people in every square kilometre on average while Australia's is 3.5 people.
The Gaza Strip, centre of the world's attention as Israel and Hamas fight, is a 12km-wide enclave between Israel and the Mediterranean Sea.
For context, 12km is about the distance of a direct route from the Sydney Harbour Bridge to the runways of the city's airport which extend into Botany Bay, or Flinders Street station in Melbourne to Altona Beach.

Its length, 41km from Israel to a border with Egypt, is slightly shorter than the distance of a marathon race and about as far as Coolangatta in northern NSW is from Dreamworld on the Gold Coast.

Within the 360 square kilometres of land, about half the area of Canberra, live an estimated 2.1 million people. That's more than four times those living in the Australian capital, or about as many as Brisbane.

This makes the Gaza Strip one of the most densely populated places on the planet, with 6,507 people in every square kilometre on average, around the same as Hong Kong. Australia's population density is 3.5 people per square kilometre.
The median age is 18, according to the CIA's World Factbook, while Australia's is 37.5, and the life expectancy at birth is 75.66 years. Afghanistan is the world's lowest at 54, Monaco's the highest at 89.64 years, and Australia in 14th at 83.28 years.

When considering both the West Bank and Gaza Strip, four in 10 people between 15-24 are jobless. In Australia, it's one in 10.


