Gaza gets first fuel delivery but UN warns its ops 'on verge of collapse'
"To have fuel for trucks only will not save lives anymore, the fuel shortages had prompted critical shortages of drinking water," says the UNRWA chief.
Just hours after receiving its first wartime delivery of fuel from outside Gaza, the UN has warned its operations in the territory were facing collapse, with most people soon unable to access drinking water.
"Our entire operation is now on the verge of collapse," said Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, on Wednesday.
"To have fuel for trucks only will not save lives anymore," the UNRWA chief wrote on X, formerly Twitter, saying the fuel shortages had prompted critical shortages of drinking water.
Our entire operation is now on the verge of collapse.
— Philippe Lazzarini (@UNLazzarini) November 15, 2023
By the end of today, around 70 % of the population in #Gaza won’t have access to clean water.
To have fuel for trucks only will not save lives anymore. Waiting longer will cost lives.
"By the end of today, around 70 percent of the population in Gaza won't have access to clean water," he said of the 2.4 million people living in the tiny territory.
Fuel shortages affecting basic amenities
Earlier, Thomas White, the head of UNRWA's Gaza operations, said that supplying fuel for trucks did nothing to address the fuel shortages that were crippling hospitals, sewage facilities and water supplies.
"In Rafah, all 10 water wells have stopped pumping, the only source of water in the city why? No fuel," he wrote on X, referring to the city on Gaza's southern tip.
He also said the desalination plant in Khan Yunis, which "supplies drinking water for hundreds of thousands of people" had also ground to a halt due to fuel shortages, along with Rafah's only sewage plant.