With no waste treatment 
		available, Gaza pumping sewage into sea, a UN Report
		
		Wednesday March 12, 2008 03:59 by Saed Bannoura
		The United Nations information service, IRIN, 
		has released a report detailing the environmental devastation faced by 
		the population of Gaza due to the ongoing Israeli siege of the Gaza 
		Strip.
		
		
		The following is the UN report: 
		As temperatures rise after the winter, more 
		people in Israel and the Gaza Strip will head for the seaside but they 
		should beware: Gaza is being forced to dump much more raw sewage into 
		the Mediterranean than before, environmentalists told IRIN.
		 
		According to Monther Shoblak, head of the Gaza Coastal Municipalities 
		Water Utility, before the Israeli-imposed restrictions on fuel imports, 
		the utility was dumping about 20,000 cubic metres of raw sewage into the 
		sea daily. This was due to the outdated treatment plants in the enclave 
		being too small to handle the amount of waste produced by the growing 
		population.
		 
		Since Israeli-imposed fuel restrictions began last year, limiting the 
		Gaza power plant's ability to produce electricity, on average another 
		40,000 cubic meters of untreated or partially treated waste water has 
		been pumped into the sea daily.
		 
		"If I have fuel and or electricity, I can treat. If not, I am obliged to 
		send it to the sea without treatment, but I try to at least partially 
		treat some waste water," Shoblak told IRIN.
		 
		"I am optimising the limited fuel I have. I need to use it to pump 
		drinking water and to pump waste water away from the homes," he said.
		 
		Environmentalists warned that this was having an adverse affect on 
		Gaza's coastline, and in Israel they were quick to point out that the 
		sea does not recognise political borders.
		 
		''This is a disaster. This is a lot of sewage. It is a health issue, as 
		people swim in the sea and it also affects drinking water as the 
		pollutants could harm the ground water.''
		 
		"This is a disaster. This is a lot of sewage. It is a health issue, as 
		people swim in the sea and it also affects drinking water as the 
		pollutants could harm the ground water," Gideon Bromberg from Friends of 
		the Earth Middle East in Tel Aviv said.
		 
		He said the UN's Barcelona Convention clearly prohibits the release of 
		raw sewage into the Mediterranean, but added that the Palestinian 
		Authority (PA), as it is not a state, is not a signatory to the 
		convention.
		 
		Internal Palestinian politics also have a role here. While in the past 
		the Environmental Quality Authority, a PA agency, would work to inform 
		the public about possible dangers from pollution, currently, with the 
		schism between the Fatah and Hamas factions, the agency's activities in 
		Gaza have been more or less suspended.
		 
		Yousuf Abu Safiyeh, who was the head of the agency in Gaza but was 
		dismissed recently by the Hamas government, said the pollution had 
		affected Gaza's fishermen: "The fish just run away from the area," he 
		said.
		 
		Gaza fishermen, who in any case catch only 10 percent of what they used 
		to in previous decades, also face Israeli restrictions on access to 
		fishing areas.
		 
		Hamas spokespersons were unreachable for comment.
		
      
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