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UN declares Gaza City emergency for floods

Hundreds of residents in flood-affected areas in Gaza City have evacuated their homes and 100,000 remain homeless from the recent war, the UN says.

Palestinians carry their belongings in floodwaters
A UN agency has declared a state of emergency in Gaza City after days of heavy rains and flooding. (AAP)

A United Nations agency has declared a state of emergency in Gaza City after two days of heavy rains and flooding in the war-ravaged Palestinian enclave.

"Hundreds of residents in the flooded areas around Sheikh Radwan storm water lagoon have evacuated their homes," the UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Thursday, referring to a northern district.

Some 100,000 Palestinians throughout Gaza remain homeless, three months after a cease fire ended a bloody 50-day war between Israel and Hamas militants, with reconstruction yet to begin.

While no casualties have been reported from the flooding, UNRWA says it is supplying emergency fuel, water, sanitation and health facilities to municipalities.

Robert Turner, UNRWA director of operations in Gaza, says the agency is "very concerned about such severe storms this early in the season and on the back of unprecedented damage and destruction" from the war.

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Thousands of Gazans were displaced last December after torrential rain hit the coastal territory, UNRWA said.

"Such devastation exacerbates the already poor humanitarian situation for refugees and non-refugees in Gaza, which is dealing with the aftermath of a recent conflict and an acute fuel and energy crisis," it said.

Little construction materials have entered Gaza following a UN-brokered deal under which Israel eased an eight-year blockade.

According to a foreign diplomatic source, the mechanism for delivering materials has "taken longer than anticipated" to launch.


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