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News, January 2008

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Gaza Strip blacked out eight hours a day, due to Israel's punitive cuts in vital fuel supplies

Gaza Strip blacked out eight hours a day as new round of sanctions begins,  

Date: 06 / 01 / 2008 Time: 18:44

Gaza – Ma'an – 

Beginning on Sunday the 1.5 million residents of the Gaza Strip will be lighting the cold winter nights with candles due to Israel's punitive cuts in vital fuel supplies.

Kanan Ubaid, the deputy chief of Gaza's electric authority told reporters on Sunday that the Gaza Strip will be without power for at least eight hours a day because Gaza's power plant does not have the fuel it needs to run at full capacity.

Rafiq Maliha, Deputy Director of the Gaza Power and Electricity Company, confirmed that as of Saturday, the fuel reserves were virtually zero, a drastic new cutback has already been in effect for the past 24 hours: "Yesterday, starting at 2 pm, we reduced our production by 30-35%, due to lack of fuel."

All of Gaza will be blacked out eight hours a day, Maliha said, “if you have an ideal situation."

The tiny Strip is one of the most densely populated places in the world, and already endures power outages up to 24 hours a day. Gaza's electric transformers have been bombed by the Israeli military.

The Gaza Strip now imports only 250,000 liters of fuel a day, far short of the 450,000 liters that are needed to reactivate the power plant and switch on a new transformer recently imported from Egypt.

This is the second round of fuel cuts implemented by Israel. The first round began in October.

On Thursday the Israeli High Court of Justice rejected a petition by a coalition of Israeli and Palestinian Human Rights groups who asked for an injunction to stop this second, deeper phase of sanctions.

Arab-Israelis hold mass protest in Nazareth calling for end to Israel's Gaza siege 

Sunday January 06, 2008 06:56 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News saed at imemc dot org

A mass demonstration was held in Nazareth, in northern Israel, on Saturday, to protest the ongoing Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip. At least 10,000 Arab-Israelis marched through the streets chanting and carrying signs.

Jamal Zahalka, an Arab-Israeli Member of the Israeli Parliament (Knesset) said that “those responsible for war crimes against the Palestinian people must be brought to justice in an international court of law…Killing civilians, starving them and denying them medical care are bonafide war crimes, and those responsible should be held accountable to international law.”

The protest brought together various Arab-Israeli factions and political parties in a united front to call for an end to Israeli aggression against the Palestinian population in the Occupied Territories.

Arab-Israelis are Palestinians who remained in their homes in what is now Israel when the state of Israel was created in 1948. Arab-Israelis make up 20% of the Israeli population – most are connected via family ties to Palestinians who fled to refugee camps in the two Palestinian territories, the West Bank and Gaza. But because the Palestinians who remain inside Israel hold Israeli ID cards, they are unable to go to the Palestinian territories, and Palestinians living inside the territories are forbidden by Israeli authorities from entering Israel.

At the rally Saturday, Shaikh Raed Salah, head of the Islamic Movement inside Israel, stated, “In spite of this festive holiday atmosphere our hearts are burdened, and will remain so until the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.”

The protesters called for an end to the siege on Gaza, in which Israel has closed all borders of the Gaza Strip since May, preventing the entire population of Gaza from going in or out, and preventing all imports and exports into and out of Gaza. This has led to an unemployment rate of 90%, malnutrition rates of up to 40% of children in Gaza, and severely impoverished and stressed conditions inside what Gazans call 'the largest open-air prison on earth'. The Gaza Strip is one of the most crowded places on earth, home to 1.3 million Palestinians, many of them refugees from what is now Israel.

 


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