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(suspenseful music)
- [Narrator] People in Gaza are being forced to use seawater
to clean themselves, wash their clothes,
and clean the dishes.
This is a result of Israel's siege,
which restricted the supply
of water, food, fuel, and medicine
into the Palestinian enclave
in response to Hamas's deadly attacks on October 7.
(refugees speaking foreign language)
- [Narrator] The World Health Organization said
that more than 2 million Gazans
have to get by on just three liters of water per day
for drinking, cooking, and washing.
That's just 1/5 of the absolute minimum
of 15 liters needed for basic survival according to the WHO.
(pump buzzing)
Gaza's water crisis began well before the current conflict
between Israel and Hamas.
Most of Gaza's fresh water comes from a shallow aquifer,
which was contaminated with sewage and seawater
even before the war.
The UN has said that as much as 96% of it
is not fit for human consumption,
so Gazans had to rely on unregulated private water tankers
and desalination plants for drinking water.
There are three major desalination plants,
while some of the water is purchased from Israel.
Years of conflicts worsened
the already inadequate water infrastructure.
In 2007, Israel and Egypt imposed a blockade on Gaza
after Hamas took over power in the strip.
That severely restricted the entry of materials
to repair and maintain water systems.
Then, Israel ordered a total siege of Gaza
after the Hamas attacks.
(Yoav speaking foreign language)
- [Narrator] In the aftermath of the assault,
Israel also turned off water pipelines.
In late October, Israeli officials said
that water was flowing through two of the three pipelines.
As fuel started to run out,
two of the three desalination plants in Gaza
had to shut down.
The last desalination plant that's still in operation
was only working at 5% capacity in late October.
All wastewater plants in Gaza
are shut down due to the lack of power,
resulting in raw sewage flooding the streets.
(baby crying)
Since mid-October, more than 30,000 cases
of diarrhea have been reported according to the WHO.
Over half of those are among children under five years old.
The UN's Children's Agency warns that in conflicts areas,
children under five are 20 times more likely
to die of diseases linked to diarrhea than to violence.
(Rafif speaking foreign language)
- [Narrator] Long cues of people waiting to fill Jerry cans
are now commonplace across the territory
as water becomes increasingly scarce.
The amount of water on which Gazans rely on now
is a fraction of the WHO recommended range
of 50 to 100 liters a day.
And it's negligible compared
to what people in Israel consume
on average every day according to a UN report.
(Magda speaking foreign language)
- [Narrator] The Israeli military said Gaza
has sufficient water supplies,
as well as access to solar power and diesel.
It accused Hamas of limiting civilians' access
to those vital resources.
Hamas denies this.
What Gaza really needs according
to humanitarian organizations is fuel to restore power.
Since the conflicts began on October 7,
Israel allowed only half a tanker of fuel
to enter the besieged enclave
via the Rafah border crossing with Egypt.
- Fuel here in Gaza is absolutely.
Everything was without fuel, we do not have generator,
we do not have functioning bakery,
we do not have a functioning hospital,
and you cannot pump water.
- [Narrator] In mid-November, the UN said 200,000 Gazans
lost access to clean water
after its two water distribution contractors stop working
due to the lack of fuel.
(truck horn beeping)
Some aid trucks have entered Gaza in recent weeks,
but the UN says
they are not bringing in nearly enough fresh water.
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