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Israeli air raids worsen daily hardship in Gaza
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 31 - 12 - 2008


The streets of Gaza City are almost empty. After
five days of ferocious Israeli airstrikes which have not let up,
those who do venture into the exposed outdoors do so to buy bread or
stock up on groceries, according to dpa.
Schools have been cancelled and shops are closed, save for a few
grocery stoors and bakeries.
A long queue of perhaps 250 people wait in wet and windy weather
outside one bakery in western Gaza City's Rimal neighbourhood. The baker keeps
his door closed and two men at the entrance who allow in one client
at a time, to avoid chaos.
"I didn't have bread for two days and look at this queue. It gets
longer day after day and we are not only lacking bread, but also many
other types of food, including flower and milk," says Abdullah Wadi,
36.
But what affects him most, he says, is the relentless fear and
uncertainty amid the air raids, which have thus far killed more than
390 Palestinians and injured hundreds.
"We want to feel secure and safe in our houses and in the
streets," says Wadi.
Imad Suleiman, a father of three, says he sleeps on matresses on
the kitchen floor with his wife and children, keeping the windows
open despite the cold and rain so that no shards might fly inside if
shattered by a blast.
The 38-year-old looks tense as he stands outside the doorstep of
his building, discussing the situation in Gaza with neighbours.
After sunset, Gaza City becomes a true ghost town, plunged into
near complete darkness with only the blue and red emergency lights of
ambulances penetrating the night blackness, as do the sounds of all-
out war: Sirens, the buzz of pilotless reconaissance aircraft, the
roar of F16 warplanes and the booms of explosions, sometimes far,
sometimes near.
Israeli naval shelling of outposts and open areas along the
coast and inland can also be heard from the nearby beach of this
western Gaza City area.
Some 700,000 Palestinians living in Gaza City and its surroundings
have been without electricity since Sunday, meaning many buildings
also have no tap water as pumps have stopped operating because of the
power blackout.
"I haven't showered in three days," sighs one Gaza resident.
With the Israeli offensive in its fifth day Wednesday, goods such as petrol and cooking gas which were thus
far smuggled in via tunnels under the border with Egypt are becoming
more and more scarce.
While a 13-kg container of cooking gas cost some 370 Israeli
shekels (some 100 US dollars) before last Saturday, now the price has
gone up to 420 shekels. And hundreds line up at one gas station in
Gaza City which still has some Egyptian-smuggled petrol left.
"We are not leaving our houses, because we are afraid to be hit if
we go out," says Fathi Sabbah, an unshaven, tired-looking 45-year-old
teacher who did not bother to change out of his bedcloths as he
stands at the entrance of his building.
"You never know when and where the next strike will be."


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