Important News
- Weather: Pleasant conditions prevail
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- Palestinians killed and wounded by Israeli bombing in central Gaza
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- Occupation forces seize election posters in Beit Jala, West of Bethlehem
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- Suffocation cases among students after Israeli forces fired tear gas canisters at them near Hebron
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- Oil prices soar amid geopolitical tensions and increased demand
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- US President Trump says blockade imposed on ships entering or leaving Iranian ports starts today
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- Occupation forces close eastern gate of town near Nablus
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- Two injured by Israeli gunfire near Jerusalem
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- Israeli airstrike kills four, including woman, in Lebanon as aggression continues
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- Colonists break into Jerusalem's Aqsa mosque
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- WHO official says Israel's restrictions on medical aid entry to Gaza hinders heath response
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- Israeli colonists set up iron gate in Jerusalem's Old City
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- Israeli forces demolish Palestinian house, commercial structure near Tulkarm
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Gaza Banks May Shut Down by Jan. over Financial Clampdown
TEL AVIV, October 4, 2007 (WAFA)- Some Palestinian banks could be forced to shut their Gaza branches by year-end due to Israel's financial clampdown on the Hamas-controlled territory, Haaretz reported on Thursday.
The governor of the Palestine Monetary Authority, George Abed, said Gaza's supply of shekels, the Israeli currency, could begin to run out starting next month and that individual Gazans could have trouble receiving funds from family members abroad.
In an interview with Reuters, Abed said the 42 bank branches operating in the Gaza Strip were struggling due to the territory's economic deterioration, steep declines in imports and exports, and limitations on the supply of shekels used for day-to-day transactions.
Abed said the decision of Israel's largest commercial bank, Bank Hapoalim to sever ties with financial institutions in the Gaza Strip would exacerbate these problems unless alternatives are found quickly.
"There is a risk that several branches could close down before the end of the year if this continues," the former International Monetary Fund official said, adding additional branches could close later if the problems continue.



