'We fool ourselves & pretend': Gaza residents forced to use polluted water

According to UNICEF, children and their families in Gaza are using water from unsafe sources that are highly contaminated.

Children in Gaza walk long distances to line up at makeshift water collection points. / Photo: AA
AA

Children in Gaza walk long distances to line up at makeshift water collection points. / Photo: AA

It is not only the ever-present danger from Israeli bombardment or ground fighting that makes life a trial for Gaza's Palestinian civilians. It is also the sheer daily slog to find bare necessities such as water, to drink or cook or wash with.

For the Shenbary family, that can be a walk of 90 minutes, jerry cans at the ready, hoping to find a makeshift distribution point among the mounds of grey, dusty rubble of the Jabalia urban refugee camp in northern Gaza.

"Now that Jabalia has all been bulldozed, all the wells are bulldozed with it. There's not a single water well left," the family father Ahmed Al Shenbary said last Saturday. "Water is a big tragedy in Jabalia."

Israel's offensive has not only killed more than 37,000 people but created a humanitarian crisis with shortages of food, fuel and medicine as well as water in a territory whose housing and infrastructure is now little more than rubble.

"Children and their families are having to use water from unsafe sources that are highly salinated or polluted," said Catherine Russell, executive director of the UN Children's Fund UNICEF.

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'Deprivation and disease'

"Without safe water, many more children will die from deprivation and disease in the coming days."

People have dug wells in bleak areas near the sea where the bombing has pushed them, or rely on salty tap water from Gaza's only aquifer, now contaminated with seawater and sewage.

Children walk long distances to line up at makeshift water collection points. Often not strong enough to carry the filled containers, they drag them home on wooden boards.

"As you see, we bathe our children in a small basin. It's water from washing dishes, not clean water, because of the water shortages," said Ahmed's wife Fatima.

She bathes her son on the floor in the concrete shell of a wrecked school that now passes for their latest home after several forced relocations.

"We have hepatitis, which causes yellowing of the eyes," she said. "We also have intestinal infections not just me but the whole school. Even 'filtered water' isn't filtered. We fool ourselves and pretend."

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Palestinians back in Gaza's war-ravaged Jabalia 'shocked' by destruction

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