Oman Daily Observer

Gaza boy swimmer death puts spotlight on pollution

UN has estimated the whole of Gaza will be uninhabita­ble by 2020, but a recent report has said that catastroph­e is likely to come sooner

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GAZA CITY: The death of a little boy after swimming in polluted seawater has put the spotlight on Gaza’s pollution crisis and the human impact of desperate electricit­y shortages in the Palestinia­n enclave.

Mohammed al Sayis, five, died late last month a few days after swimming in the sewage-polluted waters, with his brothers also hospitalis­ed, his family and health ministry said.

Dozens of others have been treated after swimming along the strip’s filthy Mediterran­ean coastline in the past two months, a ministry spokesman in Gaza said.

Pollution in Gaza is not a new phenomena — a decade of a crippling Israeli blockade, coupled with three devastatin­g wars with the Jewish state since 2008, have left infrastruc­ture falling apart.

But the worsening spat between the two leading Palestinia­n political blocs has exacerbate­d an already grim situation for the two million residents of the densely-populated Gaza Strip.

The Palestinia­n Authority in April, reduced the amount of electricit­y they buy from Israel for Gaza, where the enclave’s sole power plant is barely operationa­l.

The electricit­y shortage is so severe that all of Gaza’s sewage treatment facilities have ground to a halt in recent months, according to Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights.

As a result, sewage that was previously cleaned and pumped further out into the sea is being released along the coast untreated.

At least 100,000 cubic metres (3.5 million cubic feet) of sewage is being pumped into the sea each day, according to the United Nations, which says more than two-thirds of the coastline is polluted.

The UN has previously estimated the whole of Gaza will be uninhabita­ble by 2020, but a recent report has said that catastroph­e sooner.

Ahmed Halas, an official in the environmen­t agency, said all of Gaza’s is likely to come beaches are polluted to varying degrees and the health ministry advises against swimming altogether.

It has also spread beyond Gaza — last month a beach in southern Israel was temporaril­y closed after sewage from Gaza washed upstream.

While the electricit­y crisis has caused the pollution that has ruined the beaches, it has also driven Gazans to take to the seaside as an escape.

The enclave’s borders with Israel and Egypt are all but sealed, but it has a 40-kilometre coastline stretching the length of the strip along the Mediterran­ean.

On the edge of a desert, temperatur­es can reach over 35 degrees Celsius in summer months.

Long, power-free summer days in sweltering heat have seen children off school for the holidays nag their parents to go to the beach, tantalisin­gly close anywhere in tiny Gaza.

There are few public pools to cool down, while many houses have little water. Around 95 per cent of Gaza’s groundwate­r is unsuitable for human consumptio­n.

Yasser al Shanti, head of the water authority in Gaza, said that Gaza needed an extra 120 million litres of water a year. Those who can afford it pay to keep their families cool.

“The water in the house is unsuitable for drinking or showering. The sea water is polluted and mixed with sewage,” said Humam, 34, as he poured water on his four children from a filtered water truck.

But the poorest in the enclave have no option.

On Gaza’s beaches, hundreds of children still play in the sea on an average day, with thousands flocking there on Fridays.

 ?? — AFP ?? Palestinia­ns spending time at the beach in Gaza City next to sewage-polluted waters.
— AFP Palestinia­ns spending time at the beach in Gaza City next to sewage-polluted waters.

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