- Gaza Housing ministry official put the cost of rebuilding at $150 million

Dozens of bulldozers, cranes and trucks flying Egyptian flags lined up along the border to begin crossing into the Gaza Strip, television pictures showed.
Palestinians lined the street on the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing to welcome the convoy as it rumbled into the small coastal enclave. A Palestinian border official said 50 vehicles had crossed.
"We rushed with all our money, equipment, and what we owned to join the Palestinians in the rebuilding. Every Muslim and every Egyptian wishes to take part in (the reconstruction)," Egyptian truck driver Mahmoud Ismail said in Gaza.
Eleven days of conflict between Israel and Hamas, the Palestinian activist rulers of Gaza, erupted on May 10. More than 250 Palestinians were killed in hundreds of Israeli air strikes in Gaza. Rockets fired by Gaza activists killed 13 people in Israel.
Egypt played a major role in brokering a ceasefire between both sides and has said it would allocate $500 million to fund the rebuilding of devastated areas in Gaza.
Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem on Friday reiterated the group's appreciation of Egyptian contributions to the rebuilding efforts.
Gaza’s housing ministry said 1,500 housing units were destroyed during the fighting, another 1,500 housing units had been damaged beyond repair and 17,000 suffered partial damage. A ministry official put the cost of rebuilding at $150 million.
Egypt in February opened the Rafah crossing until further notice after Palestinian factions moved towards reconciliation following talks in Cairo.
It had previously been opening the crossing for only a few days at a time to allow stranded travellers to pass. The 365-sq km Gaza Strip, controlled by Hamas, is home to around 2 million Palestinians. An Israeli-led blockade has put restrictions on the movement of people and goods for years.
Meanwhile, Egypt on Friday sent an aid convoy to neighbouring Gaza with diggers, trucks and cranes to "prepare the ground for reconstruction" of the bomb-battered Palestinian enclave, the government said.
"Following the directives of President Abdel Fattah al Sisi, engineers and technical teams crossed the Rafah border point," read a statement from the government.
Egypt's heavily secured Rafah crossing is the Gaza Strip's only passage to the outside world not controlled by Israel.
Egypt played a pivotal role in negotiating the May 21 ceasefire between Israel and Gaza's rulers Hamas, that brought an end to 11 days of deadly fighting.
Photographs released by Egypt showed dozens of construction vehicles emblazoned with the Egyptian flag.
They will be used to "clear the rubble" of debris left after the strikes to "prepare the ground for reconstruction", the statement added.
- Reuters/AFP
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