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Palestinians are even running out of drinking water.
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GAZA CITY — Power outages, fuel shortage,
appalling living conditions soured by random and incessant Israeli
attacks have become a fixed routine in the Gaza Strip as the
open-ended Israeli offensive entered its 13th day in a row.
"Never could I have imagined that the
situation would get so complicated," shopkeeper Mustafa Mahmud
told Agence France-Presse (AFP) Tuesday, July 11.
Like other Gaza residents, Mahmud has no
electricity generators left after Israeli occupation forces bombed the
Gaza Strip's sole power station two weeks ago at the beginning of its
ongoing offensive against the Palestinians.
"What it took six years to build was bombed in
a week," seethed the 60-year-old shopkeeper.
The 1.4 million Palestinians in the area have been
without electricity for between 12 and 18 hours a day.
"I have electricity about six hours a day and
the rest of the time, I depend on my generator, which eats up 10
liters of diesel oil an hour, "said Suheil Abbud, proprietor of
Gaza City's Al-Quds Hotel.
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS)
said Friday, June 30, that about 200 thousand households lost the
source of electricity, and 179 thousand households' refrigerators are
not operating due to interruption of electricity current.
It said food stuff storage for the basic
commodities like wheat and rice would not last for more than two
weeks, and 170 thousand households will loose source of cooking energy
in one week.
The Palestinians in Gaza have also been without
drinking water since the Israeli attack on the strip's power plant.
Sewage systems have no longer been working too.
Some 50 Palestinians have been killed in the
territory since Israeli launched its offensive in Gaza last Wednesday.
Israel claims the onslaught only aims at freeing a
soldier taken prisoner by Palestinian resistance groups. The
Palestinians, however, see the offensive as a bid to topple the Hamas-led
government and inflict long-term havoc on Gaza's infrastructure.
Fuel Shortage
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A Palestinian family has a dinner lit by a gas lamp and candles after Israel bombed Gaza's sole power plant.
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In addition to electricity knockout, the
Palestinians are also facing fuel shortage over the Israeli closure of
the Palestinian territories.
"I only have reserves for two days. If nothing
changes, I am going to have to close," said Abbud.
"I have never seen anything like it,"
added Abu Hasseira, owner of the Al-Salam fish restaurants, which
overlooks the Mediterranean.
"We often had petrol shortages but we never
went without electricity. It's punishment for everyone."
The UN Relief and Works Agency has put the Gaza
Strip "on the brink of a public health disaster" since the
power plant strike, with less than a quarter of the fuel needed to run
backup generators.
"For seven days, we've been without a
drop," said Mahmud Ahmed Ishawa, who heads the Gaza association
of petrol station owners.
The Gazans are totally dependent for fuel oil
supplies on Israel which controls the Nahal Oz pipeline into the
territory.
In the past, Israel used to ship in 15 million
liters of fuel a month, said Ishawa.
Since the Israeli power plant strike, the
Palestinians have increasingly been dependent on generators to make up
for the electricity knockout.
But the Palestinians are also risking losing this
choice as fuel supplies are becoming increasingly difficult to find
with many petrol stations shut.
"If the fuel for the generator runs out, I
will hand out the food that's left over. I have no choice," said
Abu Hasseira.
"All in all, 100 people — family and staff
— depend on me. I cannot close," he noted helplessly.
Israeli defense sources said on Tuesday that Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert ordered the army to intensify its offensive in
Gaza in the days to come.