Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel Flash Update #32. Nov 7

For the second consecutive day, on 7 November, the Israeli military ordered the evacuation of the Rantisi hospital in Gaza city, claiming that armed groups were using its premises and surroundings. This hospital is the only pediatric facility in northern Gaza, and it also accommodates about 6,000 IDP (internally displaced people). According to the MoH in Gaza, its evacuation would jeopardize the lives of 15 children on life support, 38 children undergoing kidney dialysis, 10 children relying on artificial respiratory devices, and others who are injured.

According to WHO (World Health Organization), due to the lack of medical supplies, hospitals in the north are conducting complex surgeries, including amputations, without anesthesia.

The current water aid entering from Egypt in bottles and jerry cans is addressing only 4 per cent of the residents’ water needs per day, based on an allocation of three litres per person per day for all purposes, including cooking and hygiene. Water assistance is being primarily distributed in the south, where over 700,000 people have sought refuge in shelters.

The number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank since 7 October accounts for more than one-third of all Palestinian fatalities in the West Bank in 2023 (397). About 55 per cent of the fatalities since 7 October occurred during confrontations that followed Israeli search-and-arrest operations, primarily in Jenin and Tulkarm governorates. Some 30 per cent were in the context of demonstrations in solidarity with Gaza; eight per cent were killed in settler attacks against Palestinians, and the remaining seven where while attacking or allegedly attacking Israeli forces or settlers.

read the full report: Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel Flash Update #32

Palestinian mother and her newborn baby girl in a school used to shelter displaced people in the Gaza Strip. "There is no bathroom, no water, and no proper care,” she says. ”I have not checked or cleaned the caesarean section stitches yet.” Screenshot from a video by UNICEF

Alliance Water Fact, Nov 6th

Water Fact – November 6, 2023

 A ‘textbook case of genocide’ is on display in Gaza with no end to bombardments and no clean water to drink

That’s what Craig Mokhiber, the former director of the New York Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, called Israel’s war on Gaza in his blistering October 28th resignation letter.  

“The European, ethno-nationalist, settler colonial project in Palestine has entered its final phase toward the expedited destruction of the last remnants of indigenous Palestinian life in Palestine,” he wrote.  “What’s more, the governments of the United States, the United Kingdom, and much of Europe, are wholly complicit in the horrific assault. Not only are these governments refusing to meet their treaty obligations ‘to ensure respect’ for the Geneva Conventions, but they are in fact actively arming the assault, providing economic and intelligence support, and giving political and diplomatic cover for Israel’s atrocities.”

With the known toll of slaughtered Palestinians now above 10,000 – who knows how many bodies are buried under the rubble? -  Israel’s relentless airstrikes have been killing a child every 10 minutesSave the Children stated on October 29 that “the number of children reported killed in Gaza in just three weeks has surpassed the annual number of children killed across the world’s conflict zones since 2019.”

While the Biden Administration has refused to call for a ceasefire – it prefers a ‘humanitarian pause’ which Netanyahu bluntly rejected on November 3 - an internal State Department report expressed concern that 52,000 pregnant women and over 30,000 babies under the age of six months were being forced to drink potentially lethal water polluted with sewage and salt.  

Drinking seawater can be deadly for humans, leading to dehydration and organ failure.  For babies and fetuses the combination of salty and polluted water causing severe diarrhea is a likely death sentence. 

On October 28, the aid group Action Against Hunger warned:  “Gaza is dying of thirst.  2.3 million people living in the Gaza Strip urgently need clean water…more than half of the water supply infrastructure is currently damaged and in need of repair….people are rationing water and drinking only one liter a day.  Water tankers have no fuel.  Desalination plants don’t work.  You can’t access groundwater without fuel to pump it into the water network…Dehydration, extreme fatigue, along with thirst and dehydration or concentrated urine, which could mean that many people are suffering from kidney failure, are some of the symptoms we are starting to see.”  The over 640,000 Gazans in UNRWA shelters can expect only one-half liter of clean water – amounting to two glasses - a day. 

Action Against Hunger called for the immediate entry of fuel to be able to pump water, re-start desalination and wastewater plants and enable trucks to distribute water:  but fuel is precisely what Israel has bannedfrom the pitifully few trucks (374 between Oct. 21 and Nov. 2) that have been permitted to enter through the Rafah Crossing.   Before the war 550 trucks carrying fuel, water, food, medical equipment and educational material entered the blockaded Gaza Strip on a daily basis.  But even then the fuel that made it into the Gaza Strip was not sufficient to keep electricity on more than eight hours a day. 

Now there is no refrigeration to preserve whatever food is on those trucks, and lentils and rice cannot be cooked without fuel.  Very limited supplies of fuel which UNRWA and UNICEF had in storage were distributed to keep 20 pumping stations and two desalination plants in southern Gaza working at 40 percent capacity.  By November 2, these sources of water shut down as fuel was exhausted.   On the same day three trucks entered Gaza with 100,000 liters of water, enough for 20,000 people for a single day.  The only other source of clean water is a limited supply from two pipelines erratically serving southern and middle Gaza which international pressure had induced Israel to turn on.  On Nov. 4,  PBS quoted UN deputy Mideast coordinator Lynn Hastings as saying that one of those pipelines was not working and “many people are relying on brackish or saline ground water, if at all.”  The third Israeli pipeline serving northern Gaza and Gaza City remains turned off, and at least 25 sewage pumping stations in the north have ceased functioning. 

As for the food supply, according to the UNRWA director for Gaza, “the average Palestinian in Gaza is living on two pieces of Arabic bread made from flour the United Nations had stockpiled in the region.”  Despite starvation conditions “now people are beyond looking for bread.  It’s looking for water.”

As Gaza faces a catastrophic water, sanitation and food crisis and over half of its hospitals are shut down because of damage or lack of fuel, Israel is intensifying its bombing of hospitals and ambulances, schools, mosques and churches that are serving as emergency shelters, as well as densely-packed refugee camps, wiping out entire families in a second.  According to Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor,  by November 2 Israel had dropped 25,000 tons of explosives on more than 12,000 targets in the tiny Gaza Strip, roughly equivalent to the nuclear explosives that the US dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of World War II. 

 

In this heart wrenching BBC interview a pediatric intensive care doctor from the UK who has been training medical teams in Gaza for the past decade called the situation “an avalanche of suffering that is unprecedented in modern times”  and “a stain on our collective humanity.”   Israel and the US call it a legitimate exercise in self-defense and continue to oppose a ceasefire which mass demonstrations around the globe have been demanding.

 

The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine is holding its next Stand Out for Gaza on Wednesday, November 15 from noon to 1 pm at the First Baptist Church, 633 Center Street, Jamaica Plain.  Please join us! 

 

Friends, if you would like to be on a list about Alliance standouts and demonstrations in the Boston area, please contact us at waterjusticeinpalestine@gmail.com

 

photo from Boston rally

" I'm 18 years old, a conscientious objector from Israel..."

This brave young woman is the cousin of an Alliance member.

My name is Sofia Orr, I'm 18 years old, a conscientious objector from Israel. I would like to give some insight and expand a bit on the politics inside Israel, and how they changed since the war began. I grew up in a very left-wing household. I grew up on values of compassion and critical thinking, and for that I owe my parents a lot. I feel very privileged. Those same values, however, were not taught to me in the Israeli education system. In schools, and in society at large, we were always taught a very one-sided narrative. In that narrative we are always the victim, we must crush the Palestinians in order to win, the country above all, and the only solution is violence.

Growing up hearing that narrative I’ve always felt very alone, and now more than ever. Alone In my ideals, alone in my hope for peace.

I made the decision to refuse to enlist when I was 14 years old, and since then my choice only became clearer to me. I refuse to serve policies of apartheid, oppression, ethnic cleansing and transfer. I will not serve the blockade on Gaza, and will not help uphold the unbearable living situation that Israel enacts on the Palestinians living there - hunger, poverty, bombings. I will not take part in an occupation. I will fight it, and am willing to go to prison as part of this fight. Recent events do not change my decision because the essential truth has not changed: There is no military solution to a political problem, and I want to be part of the solution, not the problem.

My opinions did not change, but my feelings have. I am scared now. Since the horrific events of October 7th, there has been a shift in the political sphere inside of israel. Most of the people here were already right wing (some more than others), but now it has become unbearable. So much hatred, so many call for violence. Many of the left-leaning people too claim now to have “sobered up”. Now they say that there is no other option except war. Except violence. Even those opposing the current government do not condemn its reaction and management of the war and the hostage situation.

Only a few weeks ago there were mass protests all around the country, and a slow movement toward a more democratic mindset. But in one day it all went away, and the people here became a united front of “us” versus “them”. Such a strong shift to the right, and the right was already strong before.

There is almost no recognition in Israel of the horrible acts it is doing in Gaza, to civilians, to innocent civilians. The apparent mindset is that of “everyone is against us”, pushing away all criticism automatically. The mainstream Israeli see themselves as the ONLY victim, and ONLY a victim.

Many liberals in Israel used to put Palastinians under a label of poor helpless victims that know nothing, in a place far away with no urgent need to think about. Not as real people who want independence and liberation. This line of thought considered the Palestinian problem only as a humanitarian problem and not as a political problem, when in fact it’s both. Variations on this theme were the thought that the occupation just isn’t “humane enough”, or thinking that it’s possible to “manage” the conflict instead of solving it. Hamas’s attack shocked that mindset. Suddenly the Palestinians didn’t fit well under this “poor helpless victim” label anymore. All empathy for them was withdrawn. If they are not the victims now, then they are the enemy.

This mindset of “us vs them” is extremely harmful and unproductive. It prevents us from seeing others, their pain, their needs, and our similarities. It harms our ability to see and build a future together. It happens with Israelis and Palestinians, and I also see it all around me when trying to have discussions on the situation. There is such strong polarization, and a presentation of the situation as very black and white. This creates a strong effect of dehumanization everywhere, that in turn only escalates the situation and prevents discussion about it.

People make nuanced things seem simple, and simple things seem nuanced, all to serve the speaker’s agenda. For example, the thought that this situation, from any perspective, is “absolute evil” vs “absolute good” is an oversimplification. However, trying to make an argument of “we can’t make peace with Hamas so there will never be peace”, is looking for nuance where there isn’t. It’s ignoring the fact that Israel, the Israeli government, is the one that dictates the tone.

There are indeed two sides here, yet we’ll be wrong to say or even hint that those sides are equal. There is an occupier and an occupied, an oppressor and an oppressed. And at the end of the day, that is simple. The responsibility of stopping this horrible cycle of bloodshed is on Israel’s shoulders, as the much stronger side of the equation. And international pressure is needed for that. It won’t come from inside israel.

We must call for a ceasefire, as part of a political solution, a real, long term solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But first and foremost we must stay humane, even with all the pain, the anger, the fear. And I know these feelings - A schoolmate who was part of my life since I was six years old was murdered on October 7th. However, I can not allow these feelings to turn into a want for revenge. Instead, I insist on turning them into a want to prevent more pain, to anyone. Palestinians deserve freedom, independence and equality, and Israelis deserve freedom, independence and equality. These things will only be achieved through a political solution and a fair peace.

So stay humane, stay empathetic. In these times it’s important for me to not lose my base values, the ones I grew up on: that all human beings are equal, and deserve to live in peace and security.



♥️🇵🇸

Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel Flash Update #31. Nov 6

Clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups in northern Gaza reportedly intensified on 6 November. The Israeli military claimed it has fully encircled Gaza city and has been reportedly advancing into the city from the south. Intense bombardments from the air, sea and land continued across the Gaza Strip.  

On the 31st day of hostilities, the cumulative reported Palestinian fatality toll in Gaza surpassed 10,000, including 4,008 children and 2,550 women, according to the MoH in Gaza. About 2,260 others are reported missing in Gaza, including 1,270 children. Most are presumed to be trapped under rubble.

An additional telecommunication cut off was noticed across the Gaza Strip overnight (5 to 6 November), severely impeding the ability of ambulances and rescuers to reach those injured or trapped under collapsed buildings.  

On 4 and 5 November, seven water facilities across the Gaza Strip were directly hit and sustained major damage, including three sewage pipelines in Gaza city, two water reservoirs (in Rafah and Jabalia refugee camp) and two water wells in Rafah. The Gaza municipality warned about the imminent risk of sewage flooding. 

Read the full report: Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update #31

Displaced children staying at the Khan Younis Training Centre, the most overcrowded UN shelter in Gaza. With less than two square metres per person, many of the 22,000 displaced people at this facility stay outdoors. Photo by UNRWA