Times of Suriname

Gaza power crisis eases as Qatar donates $12 million to buy fuel

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GAZA STRIP - An electricit­y crisis that has caused protests and unrest in the Gaza Strip eased yesterday after Qatar donated $12 million to buy fuel for the Palestinia­n enclave’s lone power plant, officials said.

For weeks, Gaza’s population of 2 million has been making do with barely a few hours a day of electricit­y - less than half its usual supply. The Energy Authority run by the enclave’s governing Hamas Islamist group said the Qatarifund­ed fuel would power a third generator at the power plant and help provide electricit­y in eight-hour cycles for three months. The cash injection could also ease public pressure on Hamas, whose police forces clashed on Thursday with demonstrat­ors in Jabalya refugee camp protesting against the blackouts. The Interior Ministry said that later in the day it would free several people detained in connection with the protests. Gaza has demand for 450-500 MegaWatts of power a day but is receiving barely a third of that. About 30 MW is produced by its one aging power plant, while 30 MW is imported from Egypt and 120 MW is supplied from Israel.

The West Bank-based Palestinia­n Authority, which pays for power supplied by Israel and Egypt, normally transfers fuel to Gaza and exempts it from most taxes. But because of its own financial constraint­s, it is no longer offsetting all the tax, angering Hamas. Private generators provide electricit­y to those who can afford it in down times, but the costs of running them have spiraled. Some factories, bakeries and restaurant­s have had to lay off employees and cut working hours to survive. The local power plant, which was heavily damaged by Israeli bombing during a war in 2006 and still only operates at about half of its potential capacity, could produce slightly more electricit­y but it needs more funds for fuel.

(Reuters.com)

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