Electricity, fuel become key
weapon in Hamas-Israel standoff
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) - Mahmoud Qassem, a
fishmonger, stores his wares on ice overnight in case the fridge
shuts down. Suheil Shaban, 62, a diabetic with a bad knee,
rarely leaves his ninth-floor apartment - he can't trust the
elevator to function. A pediatric hospital director says the
generator he relies on is almost out of fuel.
Blackouts dictate the rhythm of life in Gaza
these days.
The electricity flow has been temperamental for
years, but rolling power cuts of at least eight hours a day are
the norm since Israel began reducing fuel shipments in October
to pressure Gaza's Hamas rulers to halt rocket fire on Israeli
border towns. Last week it went further, starting to trim the
supply it delivers from its own power station across the border.
Israel argues that "economic warfare" is less
painful than an offensive against rocket squads that could kill
hundreds. Human rights groups call it collective punishment of a
population of 1.5 million and a violation of international law.
Israel dismisses warnings of a humanitarian
crisis as Hamas propaganda, saying Gazans can redistribute
diminishing resources to keep hospitals, water wells and sewage
treatment plants running. Gaza engineers say that's often
technically impossible.
There's no quick solution.
Tiny Gaza has to import fuel, electricity and
raw materials to survive, but Israel and Egypt are unwilling to
open their borders as long as Hamas remains in power in Gaza.
Yet Hamas has shown no signs of relenting, and has kept up the
rocket attacks.
Gaza's electricity crisis began in June 2006
when Israeli warplanes bombed its only power plant, following
the capture of an Israeli soldier by Hamas-allied militants.
The bombing gutted six transformers and led to
months of blackouts, at first of up to 16 hours a day. The plant
has since installed new, smaller transformers, and manager Rafiq
Maliha said he can now produce up to one-third of Gaza's needs -
but only if he gets about 900,000 gallons of diesel fuel a week.
The fuel is paid for by the European Union, a
major donor to the Palestinians. But Israel is the sole
supplier, and since it scaled back shipments, Maliha said he's
only getting enough to produce 55 megawatts - 25 megawatts short
of capacity - and would have to shut down within two days if
fuel shipments were halted.
That happened three weeks ago after Israel
sealed Gaza hermetically following heavy rocketing of its nearby
towns. Parts of Gaza went dark until shipments resumed two days
later. Hamas seized the moment, staging candlelight marches and
- given extensive airtime by Arab TV stations - warned of an
impending humanitarian disaster.
Counting on widespread sympathy in the Arab
world, Hamas knocked down a border wall using explosives on Jan.
23, allowing hundreds of thousands of Gazans to swarm into
Egypt. Many brought back gas for cars in plastic canisters, but
the reserves aren't expected to last long. Many gas stations are
closed, in part because of a suppliers' protest against the
cutbacks, and traffic is light on Gaza roads.
The border-busting gamble seems to have
backfired, alienating Egypt, Hamas' main conduit to the Arab
world. The border has been resealed and Egypt's foreign
minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, warned last week that anyone trying
to cross illegally "will get his legs broken." Whether he meant
it literally is not known, but it's a shocking illustration of
the tensions that have flared between Hamas and Egypt.
Hamas-Israel violence has also escalated in
recent days. An Israeli woman died in a suicide bombing last
week, the first such Hamas attack in Israel in three years.
Israel stepped up air strikes, killing more than a dozen
militants, and its defense minister said he would "intensify the
other side's losses."
Israel's sanctions date to Hamas' election
victory two years ago, intensified after the Islamic group
seized control of Gaza by force in June, and has now culminated
in the first cut in electricity from Israel.
Ten Israeli power lines feed Gaza with roughly
120 megawatts. Over the next three weeks, 1.5 megawatts are to
be cut, according to a Defense Ministry plan that survived a
Supreme Court challenge by an alliance of Israeli human rights
groups.
Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai told Israel
Radio that the government won't harm what he called Gaza's
minimum needs, but that Israel will "continue reducing what they
get from us as much as possible."
Israel says it's no longer responsible for Gazan
welfare since it withdrew 2 1/2 years ago. Others maintain that
its responsibility endures as long as it controls access to the
territory.
Engineer Nidal Touman isn't preoccupied with the
legalities. He's too busy improvising solutions and fielding
calls from irate citizens whenever power falters. Bill
collection is in anarchy, spare parts are lacking, and the
system faces collapse, he said.
Consumers have become vigilantes, Touman said.
Some climb up electricity poles to weld shut disconnector boxes,
while many hook up pirate power lines. His repair crews have
been cursed and beaten, and this week four employees were held
up hostage overnight to force them restore power.
Shlomo Dror, the Israeli Defense Ministry
spokesman, accuses Hamas of preventing the redirection of
electricity to vital institutions to manufacture a crisis. But
Touman says Gaza's relatively simple grid can't be fine-tuned to
spare specific locations, such as hospitals.
"Without a steady supply of electricity,
hospitals cannot function, pumping stations and sewage systems
fail, and access to clean water is denied," British Foreign
Secretary David Miliband said in a statement Friday, urging
Israel to reverse its decision.
Throughout the crisis, the power has stayed on
in intensive care units and operating theatres, often with the
help of generators. Dr. Anwar Khalil, head of the Nasser
Pediatric Hospital in Gaza City, said that when fuel runs low,
he switches from a large generator to a small one, to keep the
neonatal and intensive care units going.
During a visit Wednesday, three premature
infants were lying in incubators and five older children hooked
up to respirators. Khalil said he had a day's supply of diesel
left, and still had no word from the Health Ministry when the
next delivery would be made.
Suheil Shaban, 62, the high-rise resident, who's
had an artificial knee since a car accident nine years ago, said
he rarely ventures out because he can't make it up the stairs if
the elevator goes out.
He can only hope normality returns soon.
"Electricity is like oxygen we need for our breathing," he said.
"You feel paralyzed without electricity."