“We can’t sleep, we can’t eat, we can’t drink, the smell is
killing us,” said Ahmed Shaloula, one of many displaced
Palestinians, who is from Gaza City and lives in Khan Younis.
Palestinians have faced one crisis after another since the
conflict erupted between Israel and the Palestinian militant
group Hamas in October. Aside from Israeli air strikes, shelling
and a ground offensive, Palestinians are crippled by shortages
of food, fuel, water, medicine and functioning hospitals.
Garbage is piling up in the impoverished enclave -- one of the
world's most densely populated places -- which has been reduced
mostly to rubble. At night, people stay awake fighting
mosquitoes and some are catching diseases like scabies, Shaloula
said.
“We are calling on the municipality of Khan Younis to remove the
waste.”
But the call for government services is wishful thinking in Gaza
after nine months of war, which erupted when Hamas attacked
Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking about 250 people
hostage, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel responded with an offensive that has killed more than
38,000 people, according to Gaza health authorities.
Khan Younis is the second-largest city in Gaza, home to 2.3
million people.
Damage from the war and a shortage of fuel have created a waste
problem, said Omar Matar, the official responsible for the
removal of solid waste at Khan Younis Municipality.
“The piling up of waste has led to bad smells, spread of insects
and rodents in addition to the leakage of liquids from the waste
to the underground water reservoir," he said.
The reservoir is the main source of drinking water for residents
of Khan Younis. Clean water is unavailable in most of Gaza.
“This dumping land was not correctly designed to stop the
leakage of waste liquids into underground water,” said Matar.
(Writing by Catherine Cartier; Editing by Michael Georgy and
Sharon Singleton)
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