Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




WATER WORLD
Water delivery drivers dice with death in war-torn Gaza
by Staff Writers
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Aug 25, 2014


A Palestinian woman who was displaced from her home when fighting broke out between Israel and Hamas militants over four weeks ago, carries water bottles given to her as food handouts at a United Nations school in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, where she and her family came to seek refuge. The UN estimates about 10,000 Palestinian homes were destroyed by the fighting displacing hundreds of thousands of people living in the Palestinian enclave. Image courtesy AFP.

Mohammed al-Khatib fears for his life every time he gets behind the wheel. In wartime, providing drinking water to homes and schools in Gaza means dicing with death.

At 23, Khatib is a veteran of two previous wars between Hamas and Israel, in 2008 and 2012, but nothing prepared him for the bombings, shredded nerves and death toll this time around.

"When I'm driving, I always feel frightened, upset and nervous," he tells AFP in the small warehouse where he loads up his truck with drinking water, as Israeli air strikes boom in the distance.

It's an essential job in Gaza, where at least 90 percent of municipal running water is not fit to drink and war damage means that for many people the only water comes from private vendors or desalination plants.

But at his boss Hossam Huneif's desalination plant, down a sandy track in Gaza City, Khatib is one of the few drivers who turn up. Many of the regulars have stayed away since war broke out in July.

Khatib says he is exhausted by over-working, and lack of security, fuel and electricity. Then there are the horrors he has encountered.

"Perhaps I'll go to fill a house with water and find that house has been targeted by an Israeli air strike.

"For example, the Mata family -- I always filled their tank, then one day we went and their house wasn't there anymore. It was bombed."

Three of his friends have been killed and others have been injured. At home his family of eight has swollen to 30, as they welcome in refugees escaping the worst fighting in eastern Gaza.

"Mohammed has a brave heart," smiles Huneif, the plant owner.

Pointing at another driver who has just sauntered into the warehouse, he adds: "when he hears a bomb going off, he stays at home."

"If there is bombing after 3 pm, his wife calls him all the time saying 'come home,' 'come home'," Huneif chuckles.

"There's another driver who's only been to work one day since the war started. His family locked the door and said you can't work!"

Huneif owns the plant, a smart title for the small warehouse on a corner block where donkey carts rumble past.

Trucks are parked around the corner. In the morning, they fill up with water and set off to supply schools and homes across north and central Gaza, navigating craters and rumbling past bombed-out wrecks.

The charity Oxfam estimates at least 600,000 people -- a third of Gaza's 1.8 million population -- are without running water.

Many others get running water as little as one or two hours every two days, such as in the badly destroyed neighbourhood of Shejaiya, and repairs have been on hold since air strikes resumed.

- 'Fear. Death. That's what I feel' -

Before the war Huneif was fending off growing competition from other desalination plants.

In wartime, his 24-year-old son Mahmud, fresh out of university and an IT specialist, has had to take on shifts to replace drivers too nervous to work.

"At the beginning of the war, I didn't have a problem distributing water but after the tanks and soldiers came in and people evacuated to the centre I faced many difficulties," Mahmud says.

"People would stop the truck in the middle of the street, saying 'please, my child doesn't have water to drink,' and people would climb onto of the vehicle in their rush to get water," he adds.

Wearing cut-off green trousers and with gelled hair, he fishes out his smart phone to show a short video of the incident that perhaps scared him the most.

One day when he was handing out water, there was an air strike right in the street in front of him. People fled the truck in panic as ambulances, sirens wailing, rushed to the spot.

The jumpy footage shows paramedics pulling a blanket over a dead body in the road. But it wasn't his only close shave.

"Fear. Death. That's what I feel," he says.

Then there was the time he took water to a regular customer and the neighbouring house was bombed.

Mahmud says he happened to be in the next street when a series of Israeli bombs targeted Hamas's military commander Mohammed Deif, flattening a building and killing Deif's wife and two children.

But it's not safe back at the warehouse either.

"Yesterday open land was bombed just 100 metres (yards) from here," says his father. "But we have to keep working. This is a humanitarian job. It's not just a private company to earn money."

.


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WATER WORLD
Scientists Detect Evidence of 'Oceans Worth' of Water in Earth's Mantle
Moffet Field CA (NASA) Aug 22, 2014
Researchers have found evidence of a potential "ocean's worth" of water deep beneath the United States. Although not present in a familiar form, the building blocks of water are bound up in rock located deep in the Earth's mantle, and in quantities large enough to represent the largest water reservoir on the planet, according to the research. For many years, scientists have attempted to es ... read more


WATER WORLD
Laser makes microscopes way cooler

Paper offers insights into new class of semiconductors

Discovery suggests surprising uses for common bubbles

Researchers prove stability of wonder material silicene

WATER WORLD
Harris' tactical manpack radio gets NSA certification

Saudis seek to upgrade AWAC planes

ADS will bid for USAF order for commercial satellite bandwidth

RRC supports Navy's Satellite Communications Facility in Virginia

WATER WORLD
Russian Cosmonauts Carry Out Science-Oriented Spacewalk Outside ISS

Optus 10 delivered to French Guiana for Ariane 5 Sept launch

Aerojet Rocketdyne Supports Fifth Successful Launch in Six Weeks

SpaceX to build world's first commercial rocket launch site in south Texas

WATER WORLD
Arianespace serves the Galileo constellation

ESA and CNES experts ready for Galileo's first orbits

New delay for launch of Europe navigation satellites

First operational Galileo GPS satellites integrated for Soyuz launch

WATER WORLD
China's BOC orders 82 Boeing planes worth $8.8 billion

Flight Test Preparations Draw on Launch Services Program's Expertise

BAE researches sensor concept for aircraft bodies

Bodies of two pilots found after fighter jets crash in Italy

WATER WORLD
Ferroelectric Materials Suffer Unexpected Electric Polarizations

Electrical engineers take major step toward photonic circuits

'Cavity protection effect' helps to conserve quantum information

Could hemp nanosheets topple graphene for making the ideal supercapacitor?

WATER WORLD
NOAA analysis reveals significant land cover changes in US coastal regions

New Satellite Data Will Help Farmers Facing Drought

Snow Cover on Arctic Sea Ice Has Thinned 30 to 50 Percent

NASA to Investigate Climate Impacts of Arctic Sea Ice Loss

WATER WORLD
Trash burning worldwide significantly worsens air pollution

Black carbon linked to cardiovascular health

Mexico closes 80 schools after chemical leak

Mexico acid leak leaves orange river, toxic water




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.