CBS/AP/ December 30, 2012, 2:31 PM

With blockade eased, building materials enter Gaza

An Egyptian truck loaded with gravel enters through the Rafah border crossing, between Egypt and Gaza Strip, December 29, 2012, as building material for the Qatari grant projects begin arriving.

An Egyptian truck loaded with gravel enters through the Rafah border crossing, between Egypt and Gaza Strip, December 29, 2012, as building material for the Qatari grant projects begin arriving. / SAID KHATIB/AFP/Getty Images

Thousands of tons of building materials, such as cement and steel, began crossing into the Gaza Strip on Saturday, Egyptian and Palestinian officials said, as Israel eased its five-year-old blockade on the Hamas-ruled territory.

Israel agreed to ease the blockade on Gaza under terms of a cease-fire that ended eight days of fierce fighting with Hamas last month, reports CBS News correspondent Robert Berger.

Trucks carrying gravel for private construction entered Gaza from Israel for the first time since Hamas seized control of the Palestinian territory.

Israel says 300 truckloads of goods are now entering Gaza each day.

The director of Gaza's border authority, Maher Abu Sabha, confirmed to The Associated Press that Qatar is paying for the raw materials that were bought in Egypt, to be transported through the Rafah border crossing.

The tiny oil-rich Gulf country has pledged support for 24 projects, worth some $425 million, to improve crumbling housing, schools, a hospital and roads in the Gaza Strip.

Under former President Hosni Mubarak, Israel's longtime ally, Egypt had poor relations with Hamas, and teamed up with Israel to blockade Gaza after the militant group seized power from its rival Fatah in 2007, two years after winning elections.

While Israel has eased the blockade in recent years, key restrictions remain in place on exports out of Gaza and the entry of badly-needed building materials and other goods into the territory.

New Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, of Hamas' parent group the Muslim Brotherhood, has vowed not to abandon the Palestinians. Unlike Mubarak in late 2008, Morsi kept the border crossing with the Gaza Strip open for movement of people and humanitarian supplies during Israel's latest offensive in November. Gaza has yet to fully recover from the two offensives, which left buildings, homes and schools in rubble.

Morsi reiterated in a nationwide speech Saturday that the Palestinian issue is important to Egyptians.

Since the blockade was first imposed, an extensive network of tunnels between Egypt and Gaza have been ferrying everything from cars to food to essential household items to Palestinians.

While Egypt has launched periodic crackdowns on the tunnels, its security forces generally ignore the movement of construction materials, fuel and consumer goods through what Palestinians consider an underground lifeline.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
5 Comments Add a Comment
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DovBenMen says:
slow_news replies: Again, you simply prove my point - again
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No. Your point is that Nietzsche had the correct view of Truth, so relativism and relativist morality is the way of the worl. My point is that you are mistaken. Of course, a relativist could never perceive that, no less fathom it.
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DovBenMen replies:
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Then restate your major thesis, if I've restated it incorrectly.
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Ulgnud says:
We'll see how long it takes Hamas to rebuild, re-arm, and start shooting again. This is the only reason they wanted a cease fire. They were getting stomped again.
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Ulgnud replies:
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Slow The UN has no authority so nobody cares what complaints are lodged there. Last I checked the missile firings came from Gaza for weeks before Israel finally got fed up with being shot at and took appropriate action. I am surprised it took as long as it did.
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endoilimports says:
Israel gave back Gaza and dismantled and removed ALL Israeli settlements by force in the hope it would lead to peace. The only thing they got in return were rockets. It has had to build a wall on its borders to stop suicide bombers. Schools have armed guards to protect against terrorists. It is only 9.3 miles wide at its narrowest, 34 miles wide from Jerusalem! Palestinians unfortunately are driven by an Islamic agenda to destroy a Jewish state and replace it with an Islamic state. Hamas is an extension of The Muslim Brotherhood who just took over Egypt and is instituting Islamic law in their constitution. The UN gave the Palestinians the opportunity to have a state in 1948 but instead they refused. Today they could have peace a Palestinian state if they accepted Israel's right to exist. But as Fahed Mashaal, head of Hamas recently stated Dec. 8 in his speech in Gaza, their goal is to destroy Israel. The focus should be on getting public to pressure the press to write about the Palestinians agenda to destroy Israel as the main roadblock to peace. You can't expect peace until Palestinians accept Israel's right to exist.
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