- This article follows an August 6 one discussing Palestinians
Denied Access to Water, found through the following link:
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- http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/08/palestinians-denied-access-to-water.html
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- It explained how Israel exploits Palestinian water resources,
using most of it, forcing them to find ways to get by. Water, of course,
is essential to life, rights to it natural and usufructuary. Belonging
to everyone as part of the commons, it must be used, not owned or abused,
an essential truth Israel corrupts.
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- On August 5, the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights
(PCHR) published the latest in its "Narratives Under Siege" series,
titled "There's Something in the Water: The Poisoning of Life in the
Gaza Strip."
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- "THIS BEACH IS POLLUTED" signs dot Gaza City
beaches, posing serious health hazards because of daily raw sewage dumped
into the Mediterranean Sea through 16 discharge sites along the coast.
Yet thousands fill them despite the dangers, including children, taking
advantage of one of their few sources of respite - available, convenient,
and free, but not safe.
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- For Palestinians, the sea is part of their lives - to
fish, gather with family, swim, and for children, play in the sun on hot
days, a joy this writer recalls growing up on America's Atlantic coast.
Summers were always the best time. The memories remain.
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- "Without the sea there is no Gaza," explains
Abdel Haleem Abu Samra, Public Relations Officer of the Palestinian Centre
for Human Rights' Khan Younis Branch. Being unsafe is especially unsettling
- its state in some form since 1991, but especially under siege, prohibiting
equipment, construction materials, and spare parts to build new wastewater
treatment facilities and repair existing ones.
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- In addition, conditions are exacerbated by an acute fuel
and electricity shortage, vital to run waste treatment cycles properly.
As a result, about 20,000 cubic meters of raw sewage are dumped daily into
the sea, according to Monther Shoblak, Director General of the Coastal
Municipality Water Utility, and in some areas it's up to four times that
much - a shocking, completely avoidable situation.
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- Gaza's once pristine shores are polluted, the grave implications
clear - "the Gaza Strip is, quite literally, being poisoned,"
affecting about 90% of its coastal aquifer, the essential source for residents.
Yet it's hazardous and undrinkable, given its high nitrate and chloride
levels - six to seven times higher than World Health Organization's (WHO)
safe levels.
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- As director of Gaza's water, Monther's job is challenging,
forcing him to improvise to make due, managing wastewater created by 1.5
million trapped people, 80% of them in refugee camps, living cramped in
the world's largest open-air prison, out of sight and mind to those outside
it, except activists, friends, and supporters who care. Plagued also by
inadequate infrastructure, creating hazards unimaginable in the West.
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- Monther compares Gaza's facilities to an old car still
in use despite lack of spare parts needed for upkeep. Eventually falling
into disrepair, it pollutes heavily, relevant for Gaza where even adulterated
gasoline is the normal input for cars.
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- Compounding things further, Gaza's population is growing
rapidly (about 3.6% annually), producing greater amounts of waste, current
facilities only able to handle about 32,000 cubic meters a day, about half
its needed capacity. As a result, the overage gets dumped, entirely or
mostly untreated, much of it washing back onshore, polluting beaches, creating
hazardous swimming conditions, and poisoning drinking water.
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- In northern Gaza's Beit Lahia, deterioration is especially
severe, one of its three facilities receiving over 25,000 cubic meters
daily, double its operating capacity. Worse still, the facility has no
access to the sea, so wastewater flows directly into the surrounding area,
creating a 450 dunum sewage lake, untenable contamination, exacerbated
in March 2007 when its embankment broke, killing five people by toxic flooding.
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- High nitrate levels are especially hazardous, Monther
calling them "a silent killer"- colorless, odorless and tasteless,
its continued intake reducing oxygen to vital tissues like the brain. Children
and infants are greatly at risk, their developing organs unable to cope.
Severe damage and at times death the result.
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- The longer-term consequences are worrisome, Sara Roy
saying:
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- "Nowhere else in the world has such a large number
of people been exposed to such high levels of nitrates for such a long
period of time. There is no precedent, and no studies to help us understand
what happens to people over the course of years of nitrate poisoning."
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- The harm is undeniable because the coastal aquifer along
much of the Strip provides about 90% of its water. For Gazans like everyone,
it's life, nature's gift, and essential. There's no substitute, making
it vital to conserve and keep safe, for drinking and Gaza's agriculture,
especially its citrus farms, deservedly famous, now threatened by toxic
and dangerous pollution.
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- Only 10% of Gaza's aquifer is safe, and without changes,
Monther fears it'll all be poisoned, making it hazardous for any purpose.
A 2009 United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) report warned that today's
damage "could take centuries to reverse." Under siege, Gazans
have no choice but to cope, pitting them against nature, never a fair fight
when it's hostile.
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- A Final Comment
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- A July 22 Electronic Intifada report headlined "Gaza's
strawberries spoil under siege," explaining:
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- "The northern Gaza Strip area of Beit Lahiya is
famous for its agriculture," an ideal environment for growing fruit
under normal conditions, absent under siege. Besides polluted water, farmers
like Abdulfattah al-Khateeb worry about his strawberries reaching West
Bank, Israeli and European markets, their destination for over 20 years.
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- Since 2007, however, closure cut him off from the rest
of the world, leaving "tons of his strawberries....rot(ting) while
waiting in vain at the Israeli border." As a result, he fears his
livelihood is being lost.
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- Before 1967, Gaza's citrus was called "yellow gold,"
renown for its quality. Under Israeli control, many orange groves were
bulldozed, farmers turning instead to flowers and strawberries. They adapted,
producing "the best strawberries in the world," according to
Abdulfattah, former head of Beit Lahiya's Strawberry Farmers Society.
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- Now he and others are forced to abandon their crops because
of export restrictions. "The effects have been disastrous," farmers
reporting a 40% drop in income, losing millions of dollars.
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- "The Israelis tell us how and what to plant, what
to use to plant it, and where the plants we use must come from, (and) when
we do what (they) want, they just create another problem," he explains.
Half of Gaza's strawberry farmers have given up. The others are threatened,
especially by Cast Lead's destruction of nearly half of Gaza's farmland.
Relentlessly, Israel is destroying a way of life in Gaza, a little reported
story vital to highlight and contest.
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- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com
and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays
at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
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- http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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