'Gaza water increasingly polluted, expensive'

British human rights group reports growing health risks in Gaza as a result of deteriorating water infrastructure.

Palestinian woman carrying water 390 (R) (photo credit: Nayef Haslamoun / Reuters)
Palestinian woman carrying water 390 (R)
(photo credit: Nayef Haslamoun / Reuters)
Gaza’s population is increasing, and the water supply is not keeping pace. A new report by Oxfam, the British human rights group, finds that Palestinians in Gaza are spending as much as a third of their household income on buying drinking water and facing growing health risks.
“The infrastructure has been deteriorating rapidly because we are not able to repair and maintain it,” Karl Schembri, a spokesman for Oxfam in Gaza told The Media Line. “Israeli military attacks have had a severe impact on the civilian infrastructure and particularly on the water network.”
Gaza’s main source of water for its population of 1.6 million people, one of the most densely populated regions on earth, is the coastal aquifer. Ghada Snunu of EWASH, an NGO that deals with water quality, says that 95 percent of the water in the coastal aquifer has dangerous levels of nitrate and chloride, often ten times what the World Health Organization recommends.
“Drinking this water is causing diarrhea among children and baby blue syndrome in which it is difficult to transfer blood into tissues, making the baby blue,” she told The Media Line. “Children in refugee camps have an increase in water-born diseases because of the poor quality of the water.”
Both Oxfam and EWASH blame the Israeli blockade of Gaza, which limits imports of some raw materials that could be used to make weapons. Israel tightened the restrictions in 2007 after the Islamist Hamas took over Gaza.
Government spokesman Mark Regev says Israel is doing everything possible to help Gazans drink clean water.
“Israel has been helping to improve the water infrastructure in Gaza and Israel was willing to double or even triple the amount of water going into Gaza,” Regev told The Media Line. “It is the same water that you and I drink, and the Gazans would pay less than what we pay but they weren’t willing to accept that solution.”
Palestinian water officials in Gaza say that Israel provides just 4 – 5 million cubic meters of water to Gaza per year, while Gaza uses 100 million cubic meters of water per year for drinking and an additional 80 million cubic meters of partially treated wastewater for agriculture.
Monther Shublaq, the director of Gaza’s Coastal Municipal Water Utilities (CMWU) told The Media Line that Israel has recently raised prices for the water it provides from 75 cents per cubic meter to $1.00 per cubic meter. And while Israel has offered more water, he says, it will not say when it will provide it.
“I don’t want it in the summer when I don’t really need it,” Shublaq said. “I want it all year.”
He said the majority of Gazans now rely on private water deliveries which are not regulated and are often contaminated. Gazans are spending up to one-third of their income on this water.
Gaza is surrounded by the sea, and one solution is desalination.  Oxfam and CMWU recently inaugurated a desalination plant and water distribution pipeline in the southern city of Rafah.
“Finally, for the first time in our life, we can drink water directly from our taps,” Abu Rami from Rafah told representatives from Oxfam. “It will take me a while to remember that I can drink tap water.”
But desalination is expensive. Monther Shublaq of CMWU says Palestinians hope to eventually desalinate 100 million cubic meters per year to cover most of Gaza’s requirements. Updating the infrastructure would also help stop leakage.
Ghada Snunu of EWASH says Israel must allow water from the mountain aquifer, which runs under both Israel and the West Bank to reach Gaza. Palestinians say the West Bank and Gaza, along with east Jerusalem should be part of the Palestinian state.
But all of these solutions take time and are expensive. Meanwhile, many Gazans will continue to drink water that is expensive, polluted, or both.
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