
Getting Gaza back online
How Gaza is developing as an unlikely tech hub as Gazans look to the digital economy to get some hard-earned cash for their families.
How amid the tents and the rubble Gaza is developing once again as an unlikely tech hub.
Even before the October 7th 2023 attack and the subsequent war between Israel and Hamas, NGOs, with the backing of Google, had sought to develop tech start-ups in the Gaza strip. The digital economy was one of the few areas in which young Gazans in particular could seek to earn money for their families.
During the two years of war they struggled for food and water. Forced to move from place to place, most of them lost their homes, their work, sometimes their laptops and plenty lost family members. Now 80% of Gazans are unemployed and have no income. Many of them live amid the rubble in tents. Stable electricity and internet are difficult to come by. And yet co-working hubs have begun to pop up, giving well educated graduates a chance to work remotely for foreign companies as coders, software engineers and app developers. With Israel controlling what comes in and out of Gaza, they still face significant obstacles, not least finding decent internet, electricity and spare parts for their laptops. And with near-daily bombings continuing, Gaza’s wider recovery remains uncertain. Yolande Knell reports on how its tech workers give a glimpse of a brighter, possible future, open to the world beyond Gaza’s borders.
Producer: John Murphy
Studio mix: Neil Churchill
Programme co-ordinator: Gemma Ashman
Editor: Penny Murphy
On radio
Broadcast
- Tue 4 Aug 202621:00BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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