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35% of Gazans can now drink freshwater at home: official

35% of Gazans can now drink freshwater at home: official
The Gaza-based Palestinian Water Authority announces on Tuesday that 35% of the population in the besieged coastal enclave now can drink fresh water from the tap at home after a series of projects were completed.

3 min read
15 March, 2022
A woman fills a jerrycan with water following rain in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on 13 March 2022. [Getty]

The Gaza-based Palestinian Water Authority said on Tuesday that 35% of the Ìýare now able to drinkÌýfresh water from the tap at home after a series of projects to tackle the brewing water crisis in the besieged coastal enclave were implemented.Ìý

Marwan al-Bardawil, director-general of the Project Coordination Unit at the Water Authority, told °®Âþµº that "while this percentage is smaller on average compared to otherÌýpopulations'Ìýaccess to water, it is still an improvement thanÌýwhat we had in previous years."Ìý

For years, human rights organizations have warned about the deteriorating situation regarding drinking water in the Gaza Strip.Ìý

At the 48th session of the Ìýthis pastÌýOctober, the Global Institute for Water, Environment and Health and the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor declaredÌýthatÌýwater in Gaza is "undrinkable" and "slowly poisoning" people.

Gaza's ruling government, Hamas,Ìýaccuses Israel of being responsible for the exacerbating water crisis after it imposed aÌýÌýin 2007.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), both salinity and nitrate levels in Gaza's groundwater are"well above" the guidelines for safe drinking water.

About 50 per cent of Gaza's children suffer from water-related infections, the WHO said.

In an effort to provide safe drinking water to Gazans, local authorities and private organizations have established desalination plants across the besieged enclave. Plans were drawn up in 2012 by the Water Authority andÌýapproximately $US 720 million have been invested in developing the water sector since 2015.ÌýÌý

"We have established three desalination plants; one in the city of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, one in the city of Khan Yunis and the last one in the northern Gaza Strip, in order to provide fresh water to all areas of the Strip,"Ìýal-Bardawil said.Ìý

He explained that 12 underground reservoirs were established to receive this water, whether the receiving water was from an Israeli company or through desalination that was then mixedÌýwith usable wells, before beingÌýdistributedÌýto the population in Gaza.

"In 2015, about 97% of the water that was pumped into the distribution networks for citizens was salty water, unfit for drinking. Only 5% of the population drank potable water, while 95% depended on buying water,"Ìýhe said.Ìý

However, the newly implementedÌýprojects now ensure that approximately 35% of the Gaza population are now able toÌýdrinkÌýwater from the tapÌýin their homes in areasÌýsuch as East Khan Younis, Al-Bureij, Al-Nuseirat and Al-Mughazi in the middle of the Gaza Strip, and neighbourhoods across the centre and southwest of Gaza City.

The director-general al-Bardawil stressed that work isÌýstill underway to re-develop the distribution networks in all of the Gaza Strip, and will commence after Ramadan.Ìý

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