Palestinians surviving on 3% of minimum daily water needs in Gaza

A lack of clean water and sanitation facilities has caused an uptick in infections among Palestinians in Gaza, while NGOs warn of the dire consequences.

 

The New Arab Staff

22 May, 2024

Some Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are surviving on just three percent of the global minimum standard for daily water usage, two humanitarian groups have said, as Israel’s war has decimated the enclave’s water infrastructure.

A lack of clean water and sanitation facilities have led to an increase in diseases and infections among Gaza’s civilian population, particularly children, according to the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP).

The two organisations said in a report on Tuesday that they were alarmed at the situation after recent trips to the besieged Gaza Strip, which has been under a brutal Israeli offensive since 7 October.

The report adds that field observations by experts from IRC and MAP in Gaza are struggling to find safe and clean water, and that "at least one major hospital struggling to keep sufficient water supplies to meet its needs".

The experts do not specify which hospital, however, Israel's bombardment of the Strip has fully destroyed or damaged the majority of the enclave's hospitals and medical facilities, rendering them no longer functional.

A deterioration of water, sanitation and hygiene conditions "have significantly increased acute watery diarrhoea among children under five, while other water-borne and communicable diseases such as Hepatitis are proliferating among families who cannot access sources of clean water," the report found.

Families have been forced to build their own toilets, with hundreds of people using a single one, amounting to 30 times more than the minimum global standard, IRC and MAP said.

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Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel Flash Update #168

Key Highlights

  • Nearly 40 per cent of Gaza’s population have been displaced over the past two weeks, many of whom have already been displaced multiple times. 

  • The Health Cluster warns of a further surge in malnutrition and communicable diseases due to large scale displacement towards areas that lack food, water and other basic necessities. 

  • The Ministry of Health appeals for support to address acute shortages of medications.

Read the full report: Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update #168

People being forcibly displaced from Rafah. Photo by UNRWA

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Israeli Human Rights Lawyer Attacked While Documenting Settler Raid on Gaza Aid Convoy

Aid agencies are running out of food in southern Gaza amid Israel’s ongoing offensive in Rafah and the shutdown of the two main border crossings in the south. Some 1.1 million Palestinians are on the brink of starvation, according to the United Nations, while a “full-blown famine” is taking place in the north. Meanwhile, some Israelis have been blocking aid from reaching the Gaza border, including a violent attack on trucks carrying humanitarian relief through the occupied West Bank earlier this week, when settlers threw food packages on the ground and set fire to the vehicles at the Tarqumiyah checkpoint near Hebron. “They did whatever they want,” says Israeli lawyer and peace activist Sapir Sluzker Amran, who documented the attack on the aid convoy. She says Israeli soldiers appeared to be working with the settlers, refusing to intervene. “They were just standing aside like there is nothing that they can do, like it’s normal, what’s happening.”

Watch this Democracy Now! segment.

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