
Fuel Blockade Deepens Gaza's Water Crisis
The impact on daily life is devastating. Families, many of them with children, are spending hours under the scorching summer sun searching for just a few liters of water. For many, even drinking water is becoming a rare commodity.
'We're on the verge of death,' said Asem Alnabih, spokesperson for Gaza's municipality. 'Water can reach only 50 percent of the city,' he told Al Jazeera yesterday. Out of more than 70 municipal water wells, only 12 remain in operation.
The crisis is felt deeply in every corner of life. Aya Fayoumi, a displaced Palestinian, described the grim conditions her family faces: 'There's never any water in the toilets. There's barely enough drinking water. So we have nothing left for personal hygiene or to wash clothes.'
The International Rescue Committee reports that most people in Gaza are now receiving far less than the World Health Organization's emergency minimum of 15 liters per person per day—a threshold meant to cover drinking, cooking, and basic sanitation.
With fuel barred from entry and water systems collapsing, Gaza's population is being pushed further into an unfolding humanitarian disaster—one where survival itself is now tied to each drop of water.
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Days of Palestine
14-07-2025
- Days of Palestine
Fuel Blockade Deepens Gaza's Water Crisis
DaysofPal – Gaza's water crisis has reached a breaking point, as Israel's months-long fuel blockade continues to cripple the enclave's already-devastated infrastructure. Since the full halt of fuel deliveries on March 2, nearly all desalination plants, wastewater treatment facilities, and water pumping stations have shut down, leaving millions with little to no access to clean water. The impact on daily life is devastating. Families, many of them with children, are spending hours under the scorching summer sun searching for just a few liters of water. For many, even drinking water is becoming a rare commodity. 'We're on the verge of death,' said Asem Alnabih, spokesperson for Gaza's municipality. 'Water can reach only 50 percent of the city,' he told Al Jazeera yesterday. Out of more than 70 municipal water wells, only 12 remain in operation. The crisis is felt deeply in every corner of life. Aya Fayoumi, a displaced Palestinian, described the grim conditions her family faces: 'There's never any water in the toilets. There's barely enough drinking water. So we have nothing left for personal hygiene or to wash clothes.' The International Rescue Committee reports that most people in Gaza are now receiving far less than the World Health Organization's emergency minimum of 15 liters per person per day—a threshold meant to cover drinking, cooking, and basic sanitation. With fuel barred from entry and water systems collapsing, Gaza's population is being pushed further into an unfolding humanitarian disaster—one where survival itself is now tied to each drop of water.


Days of Palestine
06-07-2025
- Days of Palestine
Surviving Gaza's Tents: Fighting Heat, Hunger, and an Unseen War
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Days of Palestine
29-06-2025
- Days of Palestine
Israeli siege turns Gaza's basics into black market gold
DaysofPal – In Gaza, where airstrikes scar the land and hope grows ever thinner, the latest crisis to grip the besieged enclave is not just war; it's hunger. And at the center of this new torment is sugar, once a basic staple, now a coveted relic of a normal life. When sugar costs more than gold In the battered neighborhood of Shuja'iyya, Abu Muhammad, a father of seven, stood outside a shuttered grocery store clutching a cup of unsweetened tea. He asked the shopkeeper, half-jokingly, if the spoon could sell sugar. 'If I had any,' the shopkeeper replied bitterly, 'I'd keep it in a steel safe.' This is no joke. According to multiple field reports, a single kilo of sugar now fetches up to 400 shekels, over USD 100, on Gaza's black market. The cause: a suffocating blockade that has choked all routes of aid and commerce. 'No sugar has entered in months,' explained a food merchant who asked to remain anonymous. 'What remains is hoarded by large traders. Prices are now set not by need, but by possession.' Kerem Shalom, Gaza's main commercial crossing, has remained largely sealed since October 7, 2023. With Israeli forces restricting entry of even the most essential food items, warehouses have emptied, and ordinary Gazans have found themselves at the mercy of an unregulated black market. Sugar, in this context, is not a luxury; it is a symbol of the collapse of Gaza's food security and a measure of how far human suffering has deepened. In a tent near Khan Yunis, Umm Anas, a widow and mother, shares her quiet longing. 'Imagine, I'm not asking for cake or meat, just a spoon of sugar to sweeten tea for my kids,' she says, voice heavy with exhaustion. That single spoon, which elsewhere would cost a fraction of a dollar, is now a luxury she can't afford, not with no income, no food rations, and no end to the blockade in sight. Aid convoys that manage to trickle through the crossings occasionally carry small amounts of sugar, but according to humanitarian groups, most of these supplies are intercepted by parallel networks and diverted to the black market rather than distributed fairly to the population. The result is a perverse economy of desperation: sugar sold by the ounce, bartered for medicine or clothing, or simply hoarded by those with power and connections. A crisis beyond calories Beyond sugar, the situation is dire across the board. Hunger has overtaken bombing as the most lethal threat in Gaza. More than 876,000 people are facing acute food insecurity, according to local assessments, with little to no access to a consistent food supply. The most heart-wrenching figures come from among Gaza's children. Of the over one million children affected by the ongoing war, around 60,000 are now in catastrophic nutritional condition. Their bodies, described by medics as 'skeletons with skin,' are silent indictments of a world that has looked away. These children, stripped of food, safety, and the faintest sense of normality, are growing up under the specter of famine and the trauma of unending war. Gaza's sugar crisis may appear trivial in the face of missiles and rubble, but it is anything but. It underscores the total collapse of humanitarian logistics and the brutal calculus of survival in a place where even sweetness has become unattainable. The price of sugar is now a measure not just of economic dysfunction but of moral failure. It reflects a world order in which blockade replaces policy, and starvation becomes a weapon. And as Gaza's people plead for basic sustenance, the global conscience remains dormant. As one Palestinian aid worker put it, 'We are not starving because there's no food in the world. We're starving because the gates are closed, and no one is opening them.' In Gaza today, the battle is no longer just about land or politics; it is about the right to live with dignity, even if only with a single spoonful of sugar. Shortlink for this post: