Adalah
The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel
*
Gisha - Legal Center for Freedom of Movement
*
HaMoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual
*
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel
*
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights
*
The Public Committee Against Torture in Israel
*
Gaza Community Mental Health Programme
*
BTselem The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied
Territories * Al Haq * Mezan Center for Human Rights
News Release for Immediate Release Wednesday,
Feb. 6, 2008
Starting
Tomorrow: Escalation in Collective Punishment of Gaza With High Court Approval
Further
Electricity Cuts Planned
Human
Rights Groups: "Israel is Depriving Civilians in Gaza of Basic Needs in
Violation of International Law".
Wed., February 6, 2008:
Beginning tomorrow (Thursday, Feb. 7), Israel will reduce supplies of
electricity it sells to Gaza, as part of punitive measures taken against Gaza's
civilian population, with the approval of Israel's Supreme Court.
The cuts to electricity were permitted after Israel's Supreme Court last week
rejected a
petition by ten Israeli and
Palestinian human rights organizations challenging Israel's planned reductions
to supplies of electricity and fuel it allows Gaza residents to purchase. The
groups claimed that the cuts violate international law, because they
deliberately harm civilians, depriving them of the energy they need to run vital
services in Gaza. Israel controls Gaza's borders and does not permit supplies to
enter Gaza except via Israeli controlled cr! ossings.
The human rights groups:
"This new electricity cut will worsen the punitive measures taken
against civilians in Gaza, in violation of international law. The fuel and
electricity cuts are already disrupting the ability of Gaza residents to receive
medical care, access clean water, pump sewage, and heat and light their homes
with no valid security rationale."
Regarding the court
decision, the rights groups noted:
"The Israeli Supreme Court's decision approving collective punishment sets a
dangerous precedent. The decision ignores the clear international law
prohibition against deliberately harming civilians and fails to stop the
military's punitive measures."
According to a
plan submitted to the court, Israel's
military will reduce supply by 5% on three of ten lines supplying electricity to
Gaza from Israel's Electric Company. Tomorrow, 5% will be cut on the first line,
and over the next two weeks an additional 5% cut will be added to the other two
lines, for a total cut of 1.5 MW.
Even as they condemned tomorrow's planned
cuts to the electricity sold to Gaza by Israel, the rights groups noted that
Israel is already making much more severe cuts to Gaza's electricity
supply - 25 megawatts by preventing Gaza's power plant from purchasing the
amount of industrial diesel needed to operate at capacity.
Today, Gaza's power plant is producing just 55 megawatts electricity, instead of
the 80 megawatts it could produce, if it were permitted to obtain more
industrial diesel. The industrial diesel cuts have contributed to a 20%
electricity deficit in Gaza, which has forced rolling blackouts that have
disrupted the functioning of hospitals, sewage treatment plants, water pumps,
and other vital services. Gaza residents are still experiencing power outages of
more than 8 hours per day on average. Cuts in petrol and regular diesel have
disrupted transportation throughout Gaza and caused shortages in the fue! l
needed to run back-up generators.