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Photos Show
Impact on Daily Life
(Jerusalem/New York, April 23, 2008) – Over the past
two years, Israel has used various means to reduce the supply of
electricity and fuel to the Gaza Strip, starting with bombing the
only power station in June 2006. In October 2007, Israel began
restricting shipments of gasoline, diesel and other fuels. Israel’s
control of Gaza’s borders and its refusal to allow the movement of
goods across the border with Egypt – with Egyptian complicity –
means that these essential goods are only available from Israel.
Israel’s stated goal is to exert pressure on Hamas,
the de facto authority in Gaza, to stop firing rockets
indiscriminately into civilian-populated areas in Israel – attacks
that constitute a serious violation of international humanitarian
law. But the energy cuts have had no discernible impact on Hamas’s
ability to carry out these attacks against Israeli soldiers and
civilians. Instead, they have had a terrible impact on civilian life
in Gaza, crippling sanitation facilities and curtailing access to
schools, hospitals, and other services essential for the civilian
population.
Deliveries of gasoline and diesel in March 2008 were
80 percent and 57 percent lower respectively compared to March 2007,
according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs in Gaza. There have been no gasoline deliveries since March
18, 2008, and no deliveries of ordinary diesel since April 2, 2008.
The restrictions on electricity and fuel to an
effectively occupied territory amount to collective punishment of
the civilian population, a serious violation of international
humanitarian law. Unlawful attacks by one side to a conflict do not
justify unlawful actions by the other.
Recent attacks by Hamas and other Palestinian armed
factions on the Israel-Gaza crossings, for the stated purpose of
breaking Israel’s blockade, have led to further interruptions and
worsened the fuel crisis. An April 9, 2008 attack by Palestinian
militants on the Nahal Oz fuel terminal – the only crossing where
Israel permits fuel delivery – killed two Israeli civilians. Since
then, Israel has continued to block all supplies of gasoline and
ordinary diesel, which is used for electric power generators as well
as vehicles. These fuel cuts have brought transportation in Gaza to
a virtual halt. On April 23, the
United Nations Relief and
Works Agency for
Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) announced that it would
have to halt its food assistance
program to
650,000 refugees owing to the fuel crisis.
For several days beginning on April 16, Israel
allowed delivery of some cooking oil. It has also permitted some
shipment of industrial diesel, but only about 65 percent of the
minimum required for the power plant to function, according to UN
officials in Gaza.
To make matters worse for Gaza residents, a strike by
Gaza’s gasoline station owners since April 7, 2008, to protest
Israel’s fuel cuts, has effectively removed the already scarce
supplies of diesel and gasoline from Gaza’s retail market.
The strike has not affected industrial diesel
supplies, funded by the European Union; whatever Israel allows to
enter is delivered directly to Gaza’s power plant. However, on April
22 the manager of the power plant said the plant would have to cease
operations the next evening unless sufficient supplies were
delivered. On April 23,
Israel agreed to deliver about 260,000 gallons of
diesel fuel, enough to run the power plant for at least three days.
Israel’s policy of restricting essential fuel
supplies, aggravated by Palestinian militants’ attacks and the
gasoline station owners’ strike, has throttled Gaza’s economic life.
This slideshow, featuring photos taken by a Human
Rights Watch researcher in mid-April 2008, illustrates some of the
ways that Gaza residents are bearing the brunt of these severe
restrictions on energy supplies. Public transport has nearly stopped
as fuel becomes unavailable and prices soar. Children cannot get to
school and medical personnel have trouble getting to hospitals and
clinics. Car owners have converted their engines to run on cooking
oil. The distribution of food aid has been curtailed due to lack of
fuel.
To view photos showing the impact of fuel cuts on
daily life, please visit this page:
http://www.hrw.org/photos/2008/gazafuel0408/
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