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Palestinian refugee Saad Eldeen Al-Jamal sits with his African two lion cubs outside his house at Al-Shabora refugee camp in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip March 19, 2015. Al-Jamal has eventually achieved his dream of raising lions at home after acquiring the two cubs, whose parents are believed to have been smuggled into Gaza through a tunnel along the border with Egypt nearly three years ago. His family have named the female cub Mona, an Arab name, while the male lion cub was named Alex. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY Image Credit: REUTERS

Gaza: Two lion cubs have become star members of a family living in a Gaza refugee camp as a result of the weak economy in the war-battered Palestinian territory.

A cash-starved zoo in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, sold the cubs to Sa’adi Jamal, a Palestinian Authority security employee who has taken them home - to the delight of his four children and their neighbours.

For the past 10 weeks, “they’ve been living in the house like members of the family”, he told AFP. The children in the three-room apartment and their local friends “play all day long with the cubs”.

But this extended family comes at a price.

They gobble up half a kilo (one pound) of meat a day, a tall order in Israeli-blockaded Gaza where prices have soared since a devastating war last July-August against the Jewish state.

“Once they turn five months,” Jamal plans to make some money by leasing the cubs out to lunar parks, seaside resorts and restaurants.

Jamal has even received a $9000 (8,400 euros) offer to buy them, but he won’t say how much he paid the zoo.