Water
crisis may make Gaza Strip uninhabitable by 2020
PBS,
1
January, 2019
In
the Gaza Strip, 97 percent of freshwater is unsuitable for human
consumption, and raw sewage pours into the Mediterranean Sea.
Facilities for desalinating and treating water function on only a
limited basis, as Israel controls the flow of fuel and supplies into
the region. But Israelis, too, could face consequences from
contaminated water. Special correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro reports.
Read
the Full Transcript
Amna
Nawaz:
Last
night, we began our series on the Middle East's water crisis in
Israel.
Tonight,
special correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro reports from the Gaza Strip,
a region the United Nations predicts will be uninhabitable by next
year, partly due to the severe shortage of water.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
Twice
a week, Khamis Al Najjar and his wife, Madlain, go down the street to
a municipal water station to fill containers of drinking water for
their family of nine, including six children and Madlain's mother.
The
water costs nearly a third of the monthly government stipend on which
they survive. Khamis lost a leg in a construction accident years ago
and is unable to work.
Madlain
Al Najjar (through translator):
We
are really suffering with the water situation right now.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
The
water is not only costly. It's often polluted. The United Nations
says just 10 percent of Gaza's two million people have access to safe
drinking water.
Madlain
Al Najjar (through translator):
My
children get sick because of the water. They suffer from vomiting,
diarrhea. Often, I can tell the water is not clean, but we have no
other option.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
Ninety-seven
percent of Gaza's freshwater supply is unsuitable for human
consumption. The underground aquifer that has long supplied
freshwater to Gaza has been overdrawn. The void has been filled with
seawater and untreated sewage.
Abdul
Rahim Abu from the Gaza Water Authority said the municipality can't
afford to treat the water.
Abdul
Rahim Abu (through translator):
Eighty
to 85 percent of people here don't pay their water bills because a
majority of the people live in poverty. And the municipality doesn't
have the ability to pay for fuel to keep the water pumps running.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
Along
the beach each day, young men drag in a meager catch. Food is scarce,
they said. Unemployment in Gaza is over 40 percent, over 60 percent
among young people.
It
is one of the most significant consequences of Israel's 11-year
blockade of the Gaza Strip, which followed the election of the
militant Islamist party Hamas.
Cross-border
skirmishes are common here. Everything from Hamas rockets to smaller
improvised explosive devices attached to balloons are lobbed at
Israel. Each time, it provokes a vigorous Israeli military response.
Israel
has also severely restricted the flow into Gaza of equipment and
supplies. Uri Shor of Israel's Water Authority says seemingly
innocuous supplies for infrastructure, cement, for instance, are
often diverted. Others are weaponized.
Uri
Shor:
If
they want to bring in Gaza something that might also be turned
against Israel as building rockets or as building tunnels, of course,
we have a problem with that.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
The
standoff has greatly hindered efforts to address the water crisis.
Back
in Gaza, this $10 million desalination plant, built with European
aid, is the first installment in a large project to bring clean water
to the Strip. But fuel and electricity supplies, controlled by
Israel, allow it to operate only about four hours a day.
A
large solar array that could fill the gap sits idle because cables to
connect it have been held up at the border, says Gaza Water Authority
Director Monther Shoblaq.
Monther
Shoblaq:
Without
real cooperation and coordination and approvals between Palestinians,
Israelis, and especially from the Israeli, this project will not be
materialized.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
But
a lack of water in Gaza isn't the only issue.
The
blockade has created a massive sanitation crisis here in Gaza, where,
every single day, 110 million liters of sewage, raw and untreated,
are discharged directly into the Mediterranean, into the very waters
that feed the desalination plants in Israel, which are visible from
here, barely five miles up the coast.
Gidon
Bromberg:
The
Ashkelon desalination plant produces on its own 15 percent of
Israel's domestic drinking water.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
On
the Israeli side, I met Gidon Bromberg, co-director of an
environmental group called EcoPeace, which tries to broker
cooperation among all parties.
Gidon
Bromberg:
The
water security of Israel is very much connected to the water and
sanitation situation in Gaza. The Israeli military can build a fence
around Gaza. We can say to the public that we are disengaging from
Gaza, but the environment doesn't allow us to actually do that.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
EcoPeace
uncovered, and widely publicized satellite imagery confirming that
pollution from Gaza was affecting the Ashkelon plant and at times
forcing it to close.
He
said the situation also imperils the health of Israelis living near
the Gaza border.
Gidon
Bromberg:
We
used our connections with the mayors, with the Israeli mayors, here
around Gaza to come out and write a letter to the prime minister that
we, the people, who have been at front line of rockets from Gaza
refuse to be at the front line of potential pandemic disease.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
Israel's
government did agree to sell more electricity to Gaza for water and
sewage treatment. A World Bank-financed sewage treatment plant
recently came online after 14 years of delays.
But
again fuel shortages still hinder its operations. Once again,
politics has gotten in the way, Bromberg says, in this case, internal
Palestinian rivalries, in which the Fatah Party of President Mahmoud
Abbas has resisted bring electricity into Gaza to punish Hamas.
Gidon
Bromberg:
In
Gaza, electricity, water is also hereto being used as a tool in the
internal political fights.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
Former
Palestinian Water Minister Shaddad Attili concedes Palestinian
infighting has worsened the situation.
Shaddad
Attili:
And
who's paying the heavy price? It's the people of Gaza. Who's drinking
undrinkable water? It's our people of Gaza. Who's delivering blue
babies is our people in Gaza.
There
are — our women, they are delivering blue babies because of the
nitrate in the water. So, all people punishing our people in Gaza.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
Amid
all the intransigence, the U.N. predicts that, at this rate, Gaza
will become uninhabitable by 2020.
Mohamad
Ammar:
We
pump the water so there are these water tanks as a storage.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
International
aid agencies are trying to help with the water crisis. Oxfam recently
opened a pilot desalination plant. It plans to rehabilitate 45
similar facilities that have fallen into disrepair across Gaza, says
spokesman Mohamad Ammar.
Mohamad
Ammar:
In
this project, we target 1,200 households and more than 6,000
individuals. In general, our plan is to target half-a-million in the
coming two years.
Sana’a
Lubad (through translator):
We
drank contaminated water for a long time, until Oxfam came and gave
us clean water.
Fred
de Sam Lazaro:
The
Lubad family is one of the lucky early recipients. Once every two
weeks, Oxfam fills their small rooftop tank with 130 gallons of
desalinated water.
Absent
a political solution, it appears, Gaza's ocean-size crisis is being
addressed a few gallons at a time.
For
the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Fred de Sam Lazaro in Gaza City.
Amna
Nawaz:
Fred's
reporting is in partnership with the Under-Told Stories Project at
the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota.
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