Human Rights Watch says Israel's restriction of water supply in Gaza 
		amounts to acts of genocide
		
		 
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		 [December 19, 2024]  
		By ADAM GELLER 
		
		NEW YORK (AP) — Human Rights Watch on Thursday accused Israel of causing 
		the deaths of thousands of Palestinians by systematically restricting 
		and targeting Gaza’s water supply in a campaign that amounted to “acts 
		of genocide.” 
		 
		The rights group was the latest among a growing number of critics to 
		accuse Israel of genocidal acts in its war in Gaza. Israel vehemently 
		denies the allegations, saying its war is directed at Hamas militants, 
		not Gaza's civilians. 
		 
		In Thursday's report, HRW alleged that countless infants, children and 
		adults have died from malnutrition, dehydration and illness as a result 
		of actions by Israeli authorities over more than a year of war to 
		deliberately cut the flow of water and electricity to Gaza, destroy 
		infrastructure and prevent the distribution of critical supplies. 
		 
		“As a state policy, these acts constitute a widespread or systematic 
		attack directed against a civilian population. Israeli officials are 
		therefore committing the crime against humanity of extermination,” the 
		New York-based group said. 
		 
		The rights group said that the “pattern of conduct” outlined in its 
		report and statements from Israeli officials “may indicate" genocidal 
		intent, but it did not come down definitively on one side. Under 
		international law, proving intent is key in concluding whether the crime 
		of genocide has been committed. 
		 
		Israel, founded as a refuge for Jews in the wake of the Nazi Holocaust, 
		strenuously denies such allegations. It says Hamas is responsible for 
		the destruction in Gaza because the group hides and operates in schools, 
		hospitals and residential areas. It says the October 2023 Hamas attack 
		that triggered the war — the deadliest attack on Jews since the 
		Holocaust — amounts to genocide. 
		 
		“Human Rights Watch is once more spreading its blood libels in order to 
		promote its anti-Israel propaganda,” Israel's Foreign Ministry said. It 
		claimed Israel has worked to facilitate the flow of water and 
		humanitarian aid into Gaza throughout the war. 
		 
		“Israel will continue to ensure humanitarian aid enters Gaza, in full 
		compliance with international law,” the statement said. 
		
		
		  
		
		The new report by Human Rights Watch outlined what the organization 
		described as an extended, methodical campaign by Israeli officials to 
		deprive Palestinians in Gaza of water. 
		 
		That has drastically reduced the water supply in Gaza, from about 83 
		liters (21 gallons) per person each day before the war began to between 
		two and nine liters in the months since, the human rights group says. 
		 
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            The World Health Organization says people require 50 to 100 liters 
			per day to meet basic needs and keep sickness in check. 
			 
			Human Rights Watch said Israeli forces deliberately razed the solar 
			panels that powered four of Gaza’s six wastewater treatment plants 
			and destroyed a key reservoir. The group alleged Israel also cut off 
			electricity required to run desalination plants and other 
			infrastructure and restricted fuel for backup generators. 
			 
			When the International Court of Justice issued orders in January 
			that Israel provide Palestinians with basic services and assistance, 
			officials ignored them, the group alleged. 
			 
			Human Rights Watch said its findings were based on interviews with 
			more than 60 Palestinians, accounts from utility employees, doctors 
			and other healthcare workers and aid workers, and analysis of 
			satellite images, photos and video. 
			 
			“Doctors and nurses told Human Rights Watch that they had seen 
			numerous infants, children, and adults die from a combination of 
			malnutrition, dehydration, and disease,” the group said. 
            
			  
			In its statement, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said it has continued 
			the operation of four water pipelines as well as water pumping and 
			desalination facilities, and allowed international aid groups to 
			deliver water in tankers. 
			 
			The Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas killed some 1,200 people in 
			Israel, mostly civilians, and took 250 others hostage. Israel's 
			14-month offensive has killed over 45,000 Palestinians, over half of 
			them women and children, according to local health officials who do 
			not distinguish between civilians and combatants. The offensive has 
			caused widespread destruction and displaced roughly 90% of Gaza's 
			population, according to U.N. estimates, plunging the territory into 
			a humanitarian crisis. 
			 
			The U.N. and international aid groups say Israel has repeatedly 
			restricted aid shipments into Gaza and done little to provide 
			security inside Gaza to allow deliveries to reach their 
			destinations. They say only a fraction of the amount of aid 
			necessary to sustain life in Gaza is reaching Palestinians. The war 
			has led to a breakdown in law and order, with armed gangs repeatedly 
			stealing truckloads of aid. 
			 
			HRW's report came two weeks after Amnesty International accused 
			Israel of committing genocide in Gaza. Israel dismissed the 
			allegation as as “entirely false and based on lies.” Israel has 
			previously refuted charges lodged by South Africa in the 
			International Court of Justice that its forces have carried out 
			inhumane acts in the embattled enclave. Meanwhile, the International 
			Criminal Court is seeking the arrests of Prime Minister Benjamin 
			Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for allegedly 
			committing war crimes. 
			
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