The Gaza Siege: A Fact Sheet
Thursday, June 3, 2010

Palestine
Center
Brief No.
203 (3 June 2010)
By Yousef
Munayyer
In recent days,
coverage of the attack on the aid flotilla
headed to the Gaza Strip has focused on the
lack of availability of certain humanitarian
goods. This fact sheet is a reference tool
based on international aid agencies and human
rights groups on the impact of the siege on the
population of Gaza.
Electricity:
The siege has led to a significant lack of
power in the Gaza Strip. In 2006, Israel
carried out an attack on Gaza's only power
plant and never permitted the rebuilding to its
pre-attack capacity (down
to producing 80 megawatts maximum from 140
megawatts). According to the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA),
the daily electricity deficit has increased
since January of 2010 with the plant only able
to operate one turbine producing only 30
megawatts compared to its previous average of
60-65 megawatts in 2009. The majority of houses
have power cuts at least eight hours per day.
Some
have no electricity for long as 12 hours a
day. The lack of electricity has led to
reliance on generators, many of which have
exploded from overwork, killing and maiming
civilians. Oxfam
reported that "[in 2009], a total of 75
Palestinians died from carbon monoxide gas
poisoning or fires from generators, and 15 died
and 27 people were injured in the first two
months of this year."
Water: Israel
has not permitted supplies into the Gaza Strip
to rebuild the sewage system. Amnesty
International reports that 90-95 percent of
the drinking water in Gaza is contaminated and
unfit for consumption. The United
Nations even found that bottled water in
Gaza contained contaminants, likely due to the
plastic bottles recycled in dysfunctional
factories. The lack of sufficient power for
desalination and sewage facilities results in
significant amounts of sewage seeping into
Gaza's costal aquifer--the main source of water
for the people of Gaza.
Industry:
Prior to the siege, the industrial sector
employed 20 percent of Gaza's labor force. One
year after the siege began, the Palestinian
Federation of Industries reported that "61%
of the factories have completely closed down.
1% was forced to change their scope of work in
order to meet their living expenses, 38% were
partially closed (sometimes means they operate
with less than 15% capacity)". A World
Health Organization report from this year
states: "In the Gaza Strip, private
enterprise is practically at a standstill as a
consequence of the blockade. Almost all (98%)
industrial operations have been shut down. The
construction sector, which before September
2000 provided 15% of all jobs, has effectively
halted. Only 258 industrial establishments in
Gaza were operational in 2009 compared with
over 2400 in 2006. As a result, unemployment
rates have soared to 42% (up from 32% before
the blockade)."
Health:
Gaza's health sector, dramatically overworked,
was also significantly damaged by Operation
Cast Lead. According
to UN OCHA, infrastructure for 15 of 27 of
Gaza's hospitals, 43 of 110 of its primary care
facilities, and 29 of its 148 ambulances were
damaged or destroyed during the war. Without
rebuilding materials like cement and glass due
to Israeli restrictions, the vast majority of
the destroyed health infrastructure has not
been rebuilt. Many medical procedures for
advanced illnesses are not available in Gaza.
1103 individuals applied for permits to exit
the Israeli-controlled Erez crossing for
medical treatment in 2009. 21 percent of these
permits were denied or delayed resulting in
missed hospital appointments, and several have
died waiting to leave Gaza for
treatment.
Food: A 2010 World Health
Organization report
stated that "chronic malnutrition in the
Gaza Strip has risen over the past few years
and has now reached 10.2%. Micronutrient
deficiencies among children and women have
reached levels that are of concern." According
to UN OCHA: "Over 60 percent of households
are now food insecure, threatening the health
and wellbeing of children, women and men. In
this context, agriculture offers some practical
solutions to a humanitarian problem. However,
Israel's import and access restrictions
continue to suffocate the agriculture sector
and directly contribute to rising food
insecurity. Of particular concern, farmers and
fishers' lives are regularly put at risk, due
to Israel's enforcement of its access
restrictions. The fact that this coastal
population now imports fish from Israel and
through tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border
speaks to the absurdity of the situation." 72
percent of Gaza's fish profit comes from beyond
the three nautical mile mark, but
further restrictions by Israel's naval
blockade prevents Gazans from fishing
beyond that mark. Between 2008 and 2009 the
fishing catch was down 47
percent.This article
originally appeared on Foreignpolicy.com.
Yousef
Munayyer
is Executive Director of the Palestine Center.
This policy brief may be
used without permission but with proper
attribution to the Center.
The views in this
brief are those of the author and
do not necessarily reflect those of The
Jerusalem Fund.