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Israel cuts
fuel supplies to Gaza Strip
Middle East Desk Report
GAZA CIT,( Gaza Strip)—Israel began cutting vital fuel shipments to the
Gaza Strip on Sunday, following through on a promise to step up pressure
on the area’s Hamas rulers in response to months of Palestinian rocket
attacks.
Dor Alon, the Israeli energy company that sells fuel to Gaza, confirmed
it had received instructions from the Israeli Defense Ministry to reduce
shipments. The move drew harsh condemnation from Palestinians in Gaza,
which relies on Israel for almost all its fuel and gasoline and more
than half of its electricity.
“This is a serious warning to the people of the Gaza Strip. Their lives
are now in danger,” said Ahmed Ali, deputy director of Gaza’s Petroleum
Authority, which distributes Israeli fuel shipments to private
Palestinian companies. “The hospitals, water pumping station and sewage
will now be affected by the lack of fuel.”
Ali said daily fuel shipments on Sunday were more than 30 percent below
normal. He said it would take several days for the fuel crunch to be
felt, since Gaza keeps about four days of fuel in reserve. But truck
drivers at Gaza’s main fuel depot complained that they were unable to
fill their tankers, and some drivers said they were turned away
altogether.
The fuel crunch is expected to hit Gaza harder than a planned cuts in
electricity, because the area already suffers frequent power outages.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak approved a plan to begin cutting
fuel supplies and electricity to Gaza.
The government last month declared Gaza a “hostile entity” and approved
the plan for cutoffs as a response to the near-daily rocket attacks
carried out by Palestinian militants in Gaza.
Israel says it holds the Hamas militant group, which seized control of
Gaza in June, responsible for the continued rocket fire. Although
smaller militant groups have carried out most of the rocket attacks,
Hamas has done little to stop them.
The plan has drawn criticism from human rights groups and the
international community, which say the sanctions amount to collective
punishment.
In a radio interview Saturday, Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai
insisted the fuel and electricity cutoff is not a response to the rocket
fire. Instead, he said the move was the latest step by Israel to
“disengage” from Gaza following its withdrawal of all troops and
settlers from the area two years ago.
“This is the continuation of our disengagement, since the troops pulled
out,” he told Israel Radio. “This is not connected to Qassams
(rockets),” he added. “It is a deeper, broader disengagement.”
He said the sanctions are meant to wean Gaza’s dependence on Israel and
conceded they are unlikely to halt rocket fire. But truck drivers at
Gaza’s main fuel depot complained that they were unable to fill their
tankers, and some drivers said they were turned away altogether.
Palestinians and Israeli human rights groups say that Israel remains
responsible for the well-being of Gaza’s 1.4 million people. They say
that despite the 2005 withdrawal from Gaza, Israel still controls the
area’s borders — limiting imports, exports and the movement of human
beings in and out of the area — and therefore continues to occupy the
strip.
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