Costal Polution of Gaza worsens
How Gaza's only escape turned deadlyOwing to the power crisis, coastal pollution worsens, causing death and disease.
On a hot summer day in mid-July, Ahmed al-Sayis, a Palestinian
from Gaza's al-Zaytoon neighbourhood, decided to take his four daughters and
five-year-old son Mohammed to the Sheikh Ejlin beach west of the city, to cool
off.
Temperatures were nearing 40 degrees Celsius and electric fans
were paralyzed by the unprecedent power shortage.
As the sun blazed over the desert-bordering Gaza, the beach seemed
like the only escape.
"The new school semester was
approaching and the heat was unbearable. The children needed a breather so we
tried to find a clean spot in which to swim and cool off," al-Sayis told
Al Jazeera.
Everything seemed fine when the family
got back home. Later that night, Mohammed began to show symptoms of illness.
"He became sick and vomited several times. The next morning, he was
unresponsive and his fever spiked, so I took him to the hospital
immediately," continued al-Sayis.
Soon enough, Mohammed fell into a coma. He was placed in intensive
care and, three days later, transferred to al-Rantisi tertiary hospital for
further tests.
There, Mohammed's doctors mustered all
their resources to save the child's life, but despite strong antibiotics and
the best available care, Mohammed's health continued to deteriorate.
Running out of time and options, the
doctors requested an urgent referral to a hospital outside Gaza. Ahmed
hurriedly tried to get the necessary approvals for the referral. "I kept
trying for a week to obtain the necessary approval [from the health ministry in
Ramallah], I left no stone unturned, but the approval was never granted,"
Ahmed lamented.
Mohammed died on July 29, 2017. His
death certificate cites a query diagnosis of Ekiri Syndrome, a lethal toxic
encephalopathy of an infectious cause and a rapid, progressive course. Doctors
informed the family that Mohammed most likely caught the bug during his swim in
the polluted seawater, which turned out to be his last.
Strolling down Gaza's coastal area, the stench of human waste is
inescapable and glaringly, the deep blue color of the Mediterranean turning
brown in several spots.
The pollution is not new. The issue was exacerbated by
infrastructure that was damaged during the 2014 war on Gaza, and by internecine
spats within internal Palestinian politics. The high demand for power in the
summer also rendered the pollution significantly worse.
As power supplies dwindled, Gaza municipalities were forced to
shut down the five sewage treatment facilities in Gaza Strip in April and
instead dump millions of liters of raw sewage into the Mediterranean.
The resulting pollution was so bad that even beaches in southern
Israel were shut down as a result.
Sami Hussein Lubbad, manager of the Environmental Health Office at
the Gaza Ministry of Health, says that hospitals have received dozens of cases
of infections that resulted from swimming in the polluted waters.
"The cases varied between
diarrhoea, skin infections, respiratory infections and eye and ear infections,"
Lubbad told Al Jazeera. "Most of the cases were children."
A survey conducted in August by the Health Ministry and the Gaza
Environment Authority found that 63 percent of the 40km-long Gaza coastal line
was heavily polluted with sewage, significantly higher compared with a previous
survey in May 2017 when 50 percent of the coastline was polluted.
"Over 110,000 cubic meters of
sewage are dumped daily in the sea, effectively turning the beach into a
hazard," Ateyya al-Borsh, chief of the Environment Authority, told Al
Jazeera. "We issue monthly surveys illustrating the most heavily polluted
areas which people should avoid."
Abdelraouf al-Manama, professor of microbiology at Gaza's Islamic
University, says that studies conducted by his department tied the distribution
of infected cases to the pollution load at their designated swimming spots.
"We found that even sand at the beach was polluted."
Still, the sea remains the only
remaining escape to Gaza's besieged population of two million.
Ali Yousef, a father of three, went
through an ordeal similar to Ahmed al-Sayis's. His children were hospitalized
for a week following a bout of gastroenteritis, which they developed shortly
after swimming in the sea north of Gaza city.
Yousef is now determined to restrict future picnics to private
swimming pools. "It was their first and last swim in the sea this
summer," he tells Al Jazeera.
But a ticket to a swimming pool costs
about 20 Israeli shekels ($5), while renting a private chalet for a day on
average costs $150.
Not everyone in the poverty-stricken
Strip can afford such prices. "I did not have the means to take them to a
swimming pool," the bereaved taxi driver Ahmed al-Sayis says.
In 2012, the United Nations warned that if nothing were done
to ease the Israeli blockade, the Gaza Strip may not be a livable place in 2020.
Recently, Save the Children, an international NGO that promotes children's rights,
said that the Strip has already become unlivable.
The organization called on Israel to
lift the Gaza blockade immediately. Meanwhile, the weight of the decade-old
blockade continues to crush different aspects of life in Gaza, including
swimming.
"Israel impedes the entrance of
the necessary parts and equipment for maintenance of the sewage network and
treatment facilities," Ateyya al-Borsh underlined.
"We are struggling to just return
to prewar levels."
Source: Al Jazeera
Dabour, Belal. “How Gaza's Only Escape Turned Deadly.” Environment
| Al Jazeera, Al Jazeera, 22 Sept. 2017, www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2017/09/gaza-escape-turned-deadly-170911104641160.html.
Response:
This article was probably written for a higher class of people
that live in Gaza. As the article very clearly showed images of the lives of
lower class people who do not have enough money to go swimming in a pool but
instead have to choose the sea. I also think this because some of the words
used are a vocabulary that only educated people would understand. I think that
this article was written for mainly people who live in Gaza because thought it
did depict the problems the people have there, the author did not go into great
detail, it seemed more of a brush up. I think that the purpose of this article
was to inform specifically the citizens of Gaza and to raise awareness of how the
poor people are living. The article does include a very tragic example of a
loss which made the article more emotional and serious. If the article had just
been facts instead of a personal story, it would not have had the same effect.
This article war really interesting to be because I did not really know how bad
the pollution was in the Sea of Gaza, so much that it even affected more of the
Pacific than just their own beaches. I do know that today there is much
pollution, but to see the sad effects on people is really sad. Also, to know
that if there was power, then the pollution would not be as bad. What do you
think is something that can be done to help in this situation? Reading this
article made me sad, and I believe the author of this article wanted his
readers to feel sad and be motivated to do something about this.
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