Imagining a day without water – and living it

Imagining a day without water – and living it 

If you want to know just how bad the water situation is in the US, have a look at some of the results of the nine month investigation into our water supply conducted last year by the UK Guardian.  

The news gets ever worse.  As drought sets a 122-year record in the western states, Flint’s position as poster child for lead contamination in Michigan is being challenged by the city of Benton Harbor

Back in 2018, this Michigan community, which is 85% Black, was revealed to have a level of lead in its water supply surpassing that in Flint, and nothing was done about it for three years.  As with so much else, racial fault lines determine who gets access to clean water.

 It is against this background that the US Water Alliance is holding its 7th annual ‘Imagine a Day Without Water’ event on October 21.  

Describing itself as ‘the hub for the One Water movement’ the US Water Alliance is working with various public utilities, private companies, and non profits to transform water management in America, and aim for a future ‘where all water is valued.’  To get there, it is mounting a ‘Value of Water Campaign’ to build the public and private will for massive water infrastructure investment.  

Its website is worth a visit.  It includes research, resources,  and policy recommendations, and features projects being undertaken by ‘cross-sector partnerships’ around the country to (among many other things) improve water quality, deal with stormwater and sewer overflow problems, protect and renew rivers, and help low income neighborhoods deal with water and sewer bills.

I could find no mention on the site that ‘water is a human right,’ but ‘water equity’ - defined as ‘just or fair inclusion’ – does make an appearance.

What happens when water is a ‘value’ – but not a human right?

There are plenty of places in the US where people don’t have to ‘imagine a day without water’ – they have lived it.   

One of them is Detroit, another majority Black city in Michigan, where in 2014 the Detroit Water and Sewage Department terminated water service to over 20,000 residents for lack of payment of bills.  

One Detroit official saw depriving residents of water as a useful way to force them to relocate, clearing areas of the city for ‘development.’

The country that has perfected the use of water as a weapon to force displacement gets $3.8 billion in US tax dollars every year.  The share paid by Michigan taxpayers is more than $95,000,000 annually, funds that could be used to subsidize spiraling water rates and improve an ailing water infrastructure.

Instead these funds are used to subsidize Israel’s 55-year-long military occupation and ongoing expropriation of Palestinian land.  Palestinians have no need to imagine a day without water, as the absence or dearth of clean water is a condition they are forced to build their lives around.

The Report of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights on the allocation of water in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip which was issued on Sept. 23, 2021 makes painful reading.  

To cite a few of its findings:  

• While half a million settlers in the West Bank enjoy their swimming pools and are amply supplied with water from confiscated Palestinian springs and West Bank aquifers controlled by Israel, 660,000 Palestinians have limited access to water, and 420,000 consume less than half of the 100 litres per capita per day recommended by the World Health Organization. 

• Israeli soldiers and settlers destroyed 84 Palestinian water installations (pipes, cisterns, tanks, wells, sanitation facilities) in 2020 and 40 more so far in 2021.  The price Palestinians are forced to pay to purchase tanker water is six times the price charged to Israelis.

• Not only has Israel restricted access to water by Palestinian communities and farmers; it has blocked maintenance and upgrades of the water system overseen by the PA, causing a third to be lost due to leakage.  

• In the Gaza Strip, where there has been a severe water crisis since at least 2005, the situation is even more dire, with only 10% of the population having access to safe drinking water.  97% of residents rely on water from unregulated private tankers and informal, small-scale desalination plants which can be polluted.

• The 15-year-long Israeli blockade has prevented the entry into the Gaza Strip of pipes, building materials and fuel needed to repair and run the water and sewage system, including in the aftermath of the May 2021 military onslaught that damaged or destroyed 290 water facilities, leaving 250,000 people without any access to drinking water.  

• The coastal aquifer is on the verge of collapse, and 75% of the shoreline of the Gaza Strip is polluted.

• Water-associated diseases are a primary cause of child morbidity and are responsible for over a quarter of childhood diseases.  

Despite the UN’s declaration that water is a human right, the vision of a ‘Day With Clean Water’ appears likely to stretch the imaginations of Palestinian schoolchildren.  

Nancy Murray

Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

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Bi-Weekly Brief & Water Fact

A one page digest of Israel’s ongoing dispossession of Palestinian land and livelihoods, and Palestinian resistance.  

As in former years, olive harvest season is a perilous time for Palestinian farmers 

Since Oct. 3rd there have been at least 18 attacks by settlers who have uprooted olive and fruit trees, sprayed trees with toxins, seized crops and assaulted farmers in various parts West Bank.  On Oct. 9 in Burin south of Nablus, settlers from Yitzhar (a notorious seedbed for violence) prevented farmers from harvesting olives and stole their equipment.  Settlers from the Rahalim outpost used rocks and pepper spray in an assault on Palestinian farmers from Yasouf near Salfit, injuring four.  They also smashed a car and drove off with harvested olives and ladders.  In Ar-Ras near Salfit, Mohammed Khatib, a Palestinian activist with a group of volunteer olive pickers called Faz’a, was beaten by soldiers and then arrested, along with two Israeli activists.  Up to 100,000 Palestinian families rely on the olive harvest, and according to the ICRC, some 9,300 trees have been destroyed in this past year.  

Emboldened settlers are rarely called to account; Israeli minister hopes to change that

This Oct. 7 Haaretz headline reflects a reality long fueling settler impunity: “Israeli Army identified settler who shot at Palestinians with soldier’s gun, but did nothing.” Israel’s security forces have done little even when they are the ones under attack.  On Oct. 11, dozens of settlers from Yitzhar attacked the Border Police with rocks and paint when they tried to dismantle a tent in a closed military area, injuring one and damaging vehicles.  The unit commander said they didn’t act forcefully to disperse the mob “because we were in a Jewish community, and we understood that.” On Oct. 13, two soldiers interviewing the Palestinian owner of an olive grove that had been set on fire were maced by masked settlers from the outpost of Adei Ad who reportedly yelled while attacking the Palestinian, "how could you bring him to our home?"  On Oct. 17, two days after Defense Minister Benny Gantz demanded that the military act decisively against settler violence, two of the Adei Ad attackers were arrested.  But on the same day settlers again attacked farmers and homes in Burin as the army stood byand watched.  

Will Biden remain mute as plan to further throttle East Jerusalem gathers momentum?

On Oct. 13, the Jerusalem municipality’s planning committee gave its approval to the expropriation of more land around East Jerusalem and the building of 1,257 housing units in Givat Hamatos that would sever Palestinian Beit Safafa from the city.  Some 470 new units were allocated for the settlement of Pisgat Ze’ev.  The 3,500 units proposed for the vital E-1 area – that would cut the West Bank in two – is up for discussion next week. There has to date been no public comment from the Biden administration.  

Sheikh Jarrah families facing eviction offered a poisoned chalice

The Israeli High Court has proposed giving three Sheikh Jarrah households ‘protected families’ status for two generations, enabling them to stay in their homes. In return, they would have to pay rent to Nahalat Shimon, the US-based settler organization that is behind the effort to get them expelled, effectively recognizing its ownership of the property. 

Water Fact

On October 12, Israeli settlers installed water pipelines on Palestinian-owned land in the Ein al-Sakout area of the northern Jordan Valley so they can plant on it and then claim it as their own.  This is reportedly part of a water network being constructed on thousands of acres they intend to seize in the area.  Meanwhile, the Israeli High Court is considering a petitionfrom 20 Palestinian owners of 247 acres in the northern Jordan Valley that had been declared a ‘closed military zone’ in 1969, asking for that designation to be rescinded.  The owners have been barred access to their land, while Israel has declined to evict the settlers who moved onto it and have it under well-watered cultivation.

 Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine 

 

 

 

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MECA: Middle East Children's Alliance

Friends,

An Alliance member received this appeal from the Middle East Children’s Alliance. Please read and if the spirit moves you, contribute to their work!

“As the Maia Project Coordinator for the Middle East Children’s Alliance, when I visit schools in Gaza and see children drinking clean, safe water I know that you are there with me.

As a supporter of the Maia Project, you have helped MECA provide drinking water to nearly 100,000 pre-school, elementary, and middle school students throughout the Gaza Strip. And last year, we started installing units that serve entire communities. 

I am pleased to tell you that after schools were closed for many months due to COVID and then Israeli bombing damaged many roads, MECA has recently completed the installation of two new water purification units for approximately 9,600 people in two remote Gaza villages

Since the pandemic lockdowns started in Gaza more than a year ago, I was waiting to get to schools to check the Maia water desalination and purification units. For the many months the schools were closed I worried about the condition of the units.  

 Then the Israeli bombs fell on Gaza. Thousands of people who fled their homes in search of safety took refuge in schools with Maia units and were able to get clean water.  At the same time the bombing and blockade made work on the units more difficult and more expensive. 

 After the Israeli bombing in May, I left my home to check on the water units. I was shocked by what I saw. So much destruction all around me and many of the roads I used to reach the schools were horribly damaged or destroyed. 

As you know, we face many challenges living in and working in Gaza. But MECA and I are committed to doing this work no matter what. And with your support we find ways to continue providing clean water to thousands of children every day, as we have for the last twelve years.

Thank you for your solidarity and your support.

Ghada Mansi
Maia Project Coordinator

P.S. At this moment I don’t know how long it will take to get all the Maia units in Gaza up and running--because of the damaged roads, the Israeli blockade, and the school lockdowns that may happen again.

Go to their website to donate.

Caption for photo below: Photo: Just after the bombing, MECA provided water tanks filled with safe, clean drinking water to 100 families who didn't have any running water due to the damage to water infrastructure.

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