Ref: 101/2008
Date: 11 November 2008
Time: 13:10 GMT
Gaza
Border Crossings Have Been Closed for the 6th Consecutive Day;
30%
of Gaza's Neighborhoods Plunges into Deep Darkness While Shortage of
Flour Presages Closure of Gaza's Bakeries
The
Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) is deeply concerned over
continued policies of collective punishment imposed by Israeli
Occupation Forces (IOF) on the Palestinian civilian population in the
Gaza Strip. These policies have included ban on delivery of food
supplies and basic goods, including energy fuel required for electricity
generation, grains and wheat. Following the halt of fuel supplies to the
Gaza Strip in the past six days, more than 30% of the population of Gaza
were rendered in complete darkness last night, and people lined up in
front of bakeries to buy flour and bread. Although IOF allowed the
delivery of 427,410 liters of energy fuel this morning, which is enough
to operate Gaza's power plant for a single day, PCHR in concerned that
humanitarian conditions in the Gaza Strip may further deteriorate.
IOF
have closed all commercial crossings of the Gaza Strip since Wednesday,
15 November 2008, banning the delivery of the limited quantities of
supplies that had been allowed into the Gaza Strip. IOF have also
stopped the delivery of fuel supplies that had been already reduced,
which has caused further deterioration to humanitarian conditions in the
Gaza Strip that had been deteriorating since 15 June 2007 when IOF
imposed a total siege on the Gaza Strip.
According to PCHR's observations and its field workers' report, the
negative impacts of the last closure has been visible since Sunday, 9
November 2008. The closure of Nahal Ouz crossing, which is used for the
delivery of fuel supplies, has resulted in n acute shortage of the
energy fuel required for the operation Gaza' power plant that generates
approximately one third of Gaza Strip's daily needs of electricity.
Engineer Hassan al-Nabih, Deputy Director General in the Palestinian
Energy Authority, told PCHR that one of the electricity generation
turbines in the power plant has been stopped due to the shortage of fuel
supplies. As a consequence, the productivity of the plant had dropped
from 70 to 50 megawatts. Eng. al-Nabih added that the plant will be
completely stopped if not replenished with fuel. He explained that the
fuel supplied to the power plant, which is estimated at 2.5 million
liters per week, is promptly consumed, and hence the plant has no
reserves.
Yesterday, Monday, 10 November 2008, Gaza's power plant was put off at
18:30 when fuel ran out from the plant. As a result, many neighborhoods
in the Gaza Strip, especially in Gaza City, where approximately 570,000
people live, were rendered in complete darkness. The Gaza Electricity
Distribution Company has been forced to reschedule the distribution of
electricity to various areas in the Gaza Strip to confront the
electricity deficit resulted by the stoppage of operation of the power
plant. The Gaza Strip depends on three main resources for its
electricity supplies: Gaza's power plant that provides 67-70 megawatts
(34% of needs), Israel that sells to Gaza approximately 120 megawatts
(58.5% of needs) and 17.5 megawatts which are imported from Egypt. This
morning, IOF allowed the delivery of 427,410 liters of energy fuel that
fulfill the plant's needs for a single day, which means that the
humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip will continue.
On
another hand, the Gaza Strip suffers from acute shortages of most
commodities, particularly flour and wheat, due to the continued closure
of commercial crossings of the Gaza Strip. In addition, Gaza's
warehouses ran out of wheat; their daily needs of wheat and flour are
estimated at 500 tons. Yesterday, Mr. Ziad al-Farra, Director-General of
the Palestinian Mills Company in Khan Yunis, stated that the company
would stop its flour production within 24 hours due to stopping the
delivery of its wheat supplies since Tuesday, 4 November 2008. Al-Farra
added that the company used to get approximately 500 tons of wheat every
day before IOF closed the crossing, and it has not received any
quantities of wheat for 6 days. He explained they had approximately 600
tons of wheat in their warehouses, a quantity which is hardly enough for
two days. He also said that there are concerns that the company may not
be able to fulfill its contracted to supply 300 tons of flour to UNRWA
daily.
Sabri
Abu Ghali, a wheat supplier, stated that during the last month,
commercial crossings had been opened last month for wheat supplies for 5
days only, which deepened the wheat crisis and resulted in the
consumption of limited quantities of wheat in the Gaza Strip's
warehouses. He confirmed that three out of the Gaza Strip's mills have
suspended their production of flour, and that the other two mills are
expected to close by tomorrow, Wednesday, if they were not supplied with
wheat.
PCHR
condemns the imposition of further restrictions, which constitute a form
of collective punishment and acts of reprisal by IOF against the
Palestinian civilians. The imposition of such restrictions forms is also
a flagrant violation of the provisions of the international humanitarian
law, including the Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection
of Civilians in Times of War of 1949. PCHR calls upon the international
community, especially the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva
Convention, to break their silence, exert effective pressure on IOF to
end the suffering of more than 1.5 million Palestinian civilians living
in the Gaza Strip and ensure immediate and free flow of basic supplies,
including fuel, food and medicine, into the Gaza Strip.