The UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation said Monday that Israel’s “militarisation of water” in the Occupied Palestinian Territory is part of its “water and territorial apartheid” policy, Anadolu Agency reports.
Noting that the Gaza population lives on an average of 4.7 litres of water per person, per day, Pedro Arrojo-Agudo, in a press briefing in Geneva, reminded that it is far below the World Health Organisation’s set minimum requirement in emergencies – 15 litres.
The only natural source of fresh water is the coastal aquifer, Arrojo-Agudo said, adding that the population of 2.3 million in Gaza has been forced to pump three times more water than the aquifer receives through natural replenishment, resulting in “intense marine intrusion and salinisation”.
“In addition, Israel has been blocking 70 per cent of the materials needed to build and operate sewage treatment plants as ‘dual-use’, preventing proper sewage treatment, which has led to progressive faecal contamination of groundwater,” he added.
READ: Israel weaponises water in its military campaign in Gaza: Global Charity
The official stressed that, even before 7 October, 40 per cent of the population had been provided with drinking water, adding: “At the outbreak of the war, Israel radically cut off this water supply and the power supply, collapsing desalination plants.”
Regarding the diseases that broke out due to lack of clean water, he said 1.7 million cases of infectious diseases – including diarrhoea, dysentery and hepatitis A, polio, smallpox – were reported.
“All this, coupled with the lack of medical care, results in deaths, especially of babies and children, making water scarcity and contamination a silent bomb, which has far less visibility than those that destroy buildings and have killed tens of thousands of civilians; but a no less lethal bomb,” he said.
Calling Israel’s violation of existing international law, as the International Court of Justice has established, “systematic”, the Rapporteur said: “The militarisation of water in the Occupied Palestinian Territories has been at the heart of a policy of water and territorial apartheid for the past 50 years, including the destruction of basic Palestinian water infrastructure.”
He said Palestinians have no access to the Jordan River and cannot build wells or water infrastructure in their own Territories.
“They have only 70 litres per person per day, and many rural communities have only 20 litres, while the Israeli population has four times more on average, and illegal settlers receive and use 18 times more water for their crops and swimming pools,” he added.
UK’s decision to suspend 10% of arms export licenses to Israel ‘not enough’
The UN’s Special Rapporteur on Palestine, in the same briefing, said the UK’s decision to suspend 10 per cent of arms export licenses to Israel is “not enough”.
“So numerically, it has definitely not done enough. It has done 10 per cent of its job to comply with non-derogable principles of international law, with the provisional measures of the International Court of Justice,” Francesca Albanese said.
On 2 September, the British government announced that it was suspending 30 out of 350 arms export licenses to Israel after a review, warning there is a clear risk that certain UK arms exports to Israel might be used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian law.
The 30 licenses cover components for military aircraft, helicopters, drones and items that facilitate ground targeting, excluding UK components for the F-35 fighter jet program.
READ: Far-right ministers slam Israel’s move to re-connect Gaza with electricity as “foolishness”