Christians Standing with Israel
| Receive Our Free Newsletter |
|
|
|
Keywords: Gaza Strip *
Hamas * Haniyeh * Israel * anti-semitism * Abbas * Arab Peace Plan
* Gaza Flood
More Chaos in the Gaza Strip
More Chaos in the Gaza Strip
by Mikael Knighton
Christians Standing with Israel
Lawlessness and Turmoil Seize Gaza
"There's nothing
worse than a fool with a cause."
It's been well over a year since terrorist thugs
were seen dancing in the streets of Gaza City, indiscriminately
capping off AK-47 rounds into the skies over southern Israel in
celebration of their victory over the Palestinian Authority's Fatah
party. The outcome of the Gaza elections in late January of 2006
represented a widely-publicized, unprecedented turn of events in
which the "Palestinian" people--or should I say, the conglomeration
of Arabs in Southern Israel, democratically elected and thus chose a
terrorist organization, Hamas, as the governing body that would lead
them to days of social, political and economic bliss. What the
citizens of Gaza failed to consider--or should I say, turned a blind
eye to, was the true ideology behind Hamas, and the lengths to which
"the new kids on the block" were prepared to go in order to
facilitate it.

Fourteen months later, gone are the days in which the people of Gaza
expected radical change in the form of positive, social and economic
reform. Moreover and quite literally, gone are the days in which the
Arab people in Gaza could expect a paycheck for hours worked. The
situation in Gaza has now evolved into a humanitarian crisis--one on
a scale so dangerous that even the U.N. has threatened to withdraw
its people from the region. As you will soon see, the Hamas
government's infatuation with the elimination of Israel has blinded
them to the obliterated welfare of their own people and,
subsequently and quite literally, has landed them in deep "crap".
Earlier Wednesday, the Jerusalem Post ran a
story that read
as follows:
At least six
people were killed Tuesday when the wall of a large cesspool
collapsed, flooding the northern Gaza Beduin village of Umm Naser
with mud and some 56,000 cubic meters of raw sewage, Palestinian
officials said.
Ziad Abu Farya, head of the village council, described the
scene as "our tsunami." Umm Naser is around 800 meters away from the
border between Gaza and Israel.
"We lost everything. Everything was covered by the flood. It's a
disaster," said Amina Afif, 65, whose small shack was destroyed.
Dozens were injured and about 11 people missing, with some reports
saying up to 10 people were killed. The rest of the village's 3,000
residents fled or were evacuated by rescue crews.
A 70-year-old woman, two toddlers and a teenage girl died in the
sudden flood, and 25 people were hurt, said Dr. Muawiya Hassanin of
the Palestinian Health Ministry. In addition, 387 houses were
determined to be "unhygienic" and 96 of those were either destroyed
or deemed unsafe to live in.The cause of the collapse was not
immediately clear.
Rescue crews and Hamas gunmen rushed to the area to search for
people feared buried under the slide of sewage and mud.An official
in Gaza City said Tuesday night that the raw sewage was presenting a
particular danger to health and that the situation was not yet under
control.The Palestinian Medical Relief Society, which has a
functioning health center in the area, planned to test all people in
the region for diseases possibly contracted from the sewage. Results
would take seven to ten days, Dr. Abdul Hadi, the group's Gaza
director, told The Jerusalem Post. UNRWA was providing some 300
tents while the International Red Cross and the Palestine Red
Crescent were distributing hygiene kits, food parcels, portable
latrines, mats and blankets. UNICEF was handing out clothing to the
victims.

Officials said local and international institutions were
coordinating their relief efforts and working at a "high emergency
status." Israel's Mekorot Water Company offered to give humanitarian
assistance to the village at the instruction of Infrastructures
Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer by helping pump the sewage using a
700-meter hose and other equipment, as of Wednesday morning.
The Palestinians planned to use the hose to move sewage temporarily
to prevent a further disaster to an open area which was a former
settlement in the north of the Gaza Strip close to the village. The
assistance came after an appeal by Palestinian Water Authority
Director-General Fadel Kawash.
Earlier, Defense Minister Amir Peretz offered the Gaza Liaison
Administration any assistance necessary.
Sources at the administration said that they had been in touch with
their Palestinian counterparts and offered medical aid, as well as
the raw materials needed to fix the wastewater wall that caved in.
On Wednesday, Israel representatives of the Palestinian Water
Authority and World Bank are to meet at the Erez Crossing to
consider further options. A local Palestinian official blamed shoddy
infrastructure for the disaster. UN officials said they had been
warning of such a catastrophe for more than two years.
A 2004 United Nations report warned that the sewage facility was at
its maximum capacity and flooding was inevitable unless a new waste
treatment plant was constructed. It said that even without
overflowing, the effluent lake posed a serious health hazard,
providing a breeding ground for mosquitoes and waterborne diseases.
Stuart Shepard of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs, said the wave of waste released Tuesday sent the health
risks even higher.
"It is an extremely serious situation," he said. Shepard said that
since the report was published, international funding for a new
plant had been secured but construction had not been able to go
ahead because of the high security risks in the area.
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum blamed international "sanctions
against Palestinians, including Gaza and the West Bank" for the
condition of Gaza's infrastructure. Most foreign donors froze aid to
the Palestinian government after Hamas swept to power in a 2006
general election, but Shepard said the Umm Naser project had not
been affected by the boycott.
Dr Yousef Abu Safia, chairman of the Palestinian Environment
Authority, called the situation "a disaster." Abu Safia told the
Post that the original facility had been built by Israel in the
1980s, was meant to service about 50,000 people and was not capable
of handling the current population of some 250,000 dependant on the
system.
"We started planning and calling for funds about 10 years ago", he
says. "We have been anticipating this for that long." Abu Safia
explained that the lagoon which collapsed was a smaller one built to
ease the workload of the larger pool. He said there were plans to
change the infrastructure in the area, and construction began two
years ago with foreign aid, but several more years and more money
were needed.
The recent political sanctions against the PA had slowed down the
work, he said."Foreign experts are unable to come to Gaza," he said.
Angry residents drove reporters out of the area and mobbed
government officials who arrived at the scene.
The Water Authority's Kawash said that the level of sewage in the
pool had increased over the past few days, creeping up the earth
embankments around the pool until one collapsed, "causing the sewage
to pour toward the village."
Kawash said Gaza's poor infrastructure was to blame for the
accident. Several major sewage treatment projects funded by foreign
donors, including one in Umm Naser, were frozen after Hamas won
elections last year."We had a project to treat sewage in north Gaza,
it was worked on for two years," Kawash said. "We built a pressure
pipe line and pumping station," he added. "But it was stopped
after...[the] troubles began."
An "Irrelevant" Crisis Made Relevant
Last Tuesday, the walls of a waste
storage facility in northern Gaza gave way, effectively flooding the
region with up to 2 feet of raw sewage, causing numerous deaths and
injuries. Furthermore, rescue teams continue to search for more
bodies. Immediately following the disaster, the UN warned of the
potential breakdown of another, larger facility nearby that would
effectively spread "1.5 million cubic meters" of sewage deeper into
Gaza, thus facilitating a full-blown humanitarian crisis.
Needless to say, the potential medical
ramifications caused by the resulting pollution, contamination and
infectious disease could effectively turn this region into an
inhabitable wasteland.
Lack of Action Releases the Floodgates
of Suffering
More disturbing is a Hamas government and
PA who were warned ahead of time, by U.N. officials, of the
potential likelihood of such an occurrence. Following Tuesday's
disaster, a U.N. relief official issued the following statement,
"This has been a tragedy that was predicted and documented. The
United Nations published a report in 2004, predicting that unless
action were taken, that exactly what happened yesterday would
happen."

Regarding the proactive prevention of this disaster, where has the
P.A. been for the last 3 years? Certainly the Hamas officials were
acutely aware of a looming humanitarian disaster in their midst in a
region they currently "govern".
What objectives have they--the P.A. and Hamas government been
pursuing that are so important that they took precedence over the
proactive prevention of a potential humanitarian crisis on their own
soil?
Perspective
Sometimes, even the most difficult questions to
ask are among the easiest to answer.
Read
Part Two - "More Chaos in the
Gaza Strip"
RETURN TO ARTICLES SECTION
RETURN TO CHRISTIANS STANDING WITH ISRAEL HOMEPAGE
|
Read
More about
Arab Propaganda and Palestinian Hatred
Read More on
Christian Zionism
Read More on Replacement Theology
|