“I think the sea probably is polluted. Sometimes I get
strange white marks on my skin; but we come down to the beach every day because we have
nowhere else to go.” Samer and his friends are hanging out on the beach in
Gaza city, next to the old fishing harbour, and just about to jump into the
sea. One of the boys holds a plastic bottle with several small fish and a
tiny crab trapped inside. The fish are all dead. Less than a hundred metres
away, a sewage pipe pours mucky water into streams of dark waste that flows
towards the sea where Samer and his friends swim.
Summer is intensely hot in the Gaza Strip, and families
flock to their local beaches en masse. But on some beaches, bathers are now,
literally, swimming in sewage. According to the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), since January this year, 50- 60
million litres of untreated and partially treated sewage have been poured
into the Mediterranean Sea surrounding the Gaza Strip every day. “This
sewage cannot be treated due to the lack of a steady electricity supply
within the Gaza Strip” says a recent OCHA report on Gaza sanitation. Hamada
Al-Bayari works for the Gaza OCHA office. “We're very concerned that the sea
is becoming dirtier and more contaminated because of the chronic shortages
of fuel and spare parts” he says. “Gaza's sewage treatment plants urgently
need fourteen days of uninterrupted power in order to run a proper sewage
treatment cycle, for the sake of Gaza's public health."
The Gaza Coastal Municipal Water Utility (CMWU) is
responsible for providing drinking water across the Gaza Strip as well as
managing Gaza’s three sewage treatment plants. Due to ongoing chronic
shortages of electricity, fuel and essential spare parts, unfiltered tap
water is saline and undrinkable throughout the Gaza Strip, and none of the
sewage treatment plants are functioning normally. CMWU have recently been
forced to increase the volume of raw and untreated sewage being dumped at
sea to around 77 million litres per day, to avoid flooding densely populated
residential areas, like Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza, where 3
million litres of raw sewage recently had to be pumped into a flood water
lagoon. Despite last week’s signing of the Tahdiya, or ‘Calming’
between Israel and Hamas, normal fuel supplies have not been resumed, and
CMWU has less than a third of the fuel it needs to run a full sewage and
waste water treatment service in Gaza. Meanwhile, Israel has severely
restricted the entry of essential spare parts for Gaza’s sewage and waste
water treatment plants since July 2007.
There is now widespread concern about the state of the
Gaza Strip Mediterranean Sea. The World Health Organization (WHO) recently
took samples from 30 Gaza Strip sea shore sites, and tested them for human
faecal and animal faecal contaminants. Thirteen areas covering seven beaches
along the Strip, were identified as polluted and unsuitable for swimming,
including three beaches along the central and southern Gaza Strip and four
beaches in and around Gaza city. The beach next to Gaza harbour where Samer
and his friends swim every day, is one of them.
WHO has warned that, “Waterborne outbreaks are
particularly to be avoided because of their capacity to result in the
simultaneous infection of a high proportion of [the] community.” These
outbreaks can include gastroenteritis, ear infections, dermatitis,
dysentery, respiratory and urinary tract infections, eye infections, guardia
and strains of e-coli. WHO health guidelines suggest that water borne
pathogens are one of the world-wide causes of death and disease, and like
OCHA, the organization has reiterated that Gaza’s sewage treatment plants
urgently need upgrading, and need more fuel.
“These restrictions are a clear violation of the
universal right to health and the right to a clean environment” says Khalil
Shaheen, Head of the Economic and Social Rights Unit at the Palestinian
Centre for Human Rights (PCHR). “Under international humanitarian law,
Israel, as an occupying power, is obliged to facilitate access to all
amenities. Access to clean drinking water and sea water are nothing more
than basic human rights.”
This recent research on the quality of Gaza’s seawater
does not suggest any immanent deadly threat to public health: but the fact
remains that Gaza’s sea is dirty and contaminated because the Israeli
Occupying Forces (IOF) are denying Gazans the means to clean up their own
sewage, and no-one yet knows how serious the health risks are. Collective
punishment of a civilian population violates international humanitarian law,
but Israel is blatantly continuing its violations, and now Gaza’s tap water
is undrinkable, and its sea water increasingly unfit to swim in. The June 19
Tahdiya was signed in order to cease hostilities between Israel and
the Gaza Strip, and eventually end the siege of Gaza. But to date, the
crossings remain closed, and Gaza’s most basic amenities, like its
sanitation services, are literally being stretched to breaking point.