Israel keeps up raids amid blackout
Fuel blockade shuts sole Gaza power plant but Israel says crisis “greatly exaggerated”.

“The catastrophe will affect hospitals, medical clinics, water wells, houses, factories – all aspects of life.”
Following the blackout, Khaled Mashaal, Hamas’s political chief, called on Arab leaders and rival Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, for help to restore power in Gaza City.
“All Arab leaders, exercise real pressure to stop this Zionist crime … take up your role and responsibility,” he said in an interview with Al Jazeera.
“We are not asking you to wage a military war against Israel … but just stand with us in pride and honour,” he said from Syria where he lives in exile.
Abbas urged Israel to immediately lift the Gaza blockade and resume delivery of fuel supplies.
Nabil Abu Rudeina, his spokesman, said Abbas also called for a “special meeting” of foreign ministers of the Arab League to discuss the crisis.
This was in addition to a meeting of ambassadors scheduled for Monday in Cairo.
“If Israel does not lift the blockade in the next few hours, we are going to raise the issue with the UN Security Council,” Abu Rudeina added.
| In video |
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Nour Odeh reports on the pressure mounting on the Palestinian president |
“The Hamas claim of humanitarian crisis in Gaza is also greatly exaggerated.”
Referring to Hamas, he said: “The ball is in their court. If they stop the rockets today, everything would go back to normal.”
Power outages have become commonplace in the Gaza Strip in recent months after Israel declared the area a “hostile entity” and began restricting fuel supplies.
Ahead of the shutdown, residents bought up batteries and candles, as well as basic foods like rice, flour and cooking oil. Bakeries stopped operating because they did not have power or flour.
UNRWA, the UN organisation supporting Palestinian refugees, warned the shortages would drastically affect hospitals, sewage treatment plants and water facilities.
“The logic of this defies basic humanitarian standards,” Christopher Gunness, UNRWA spokesman, said.
Patients at risk
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| Palestinians fear the power cut could be disastrous for the health sector [AFP] |
Dr Medhat Abbas, head of the crisis management unit at the health ministry in Gaza, said that electricity from generators would only be available for a few more hours at the Al-Nasser children’s hospital.
“These patients and these children are facing their destiny and they will die soon,” he told Al Jazeera.
Al Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland in Gaza said that it was not only power generation that would be affected.
“It also means no fuel for the generators that fuel the water pumps – a lot of the water in Gaza is deep beneath the surface, and it has to be pumped to the surface – so no fuel can also mean no water.”
‘Collective punishment’
The UN has said Israel should not collectively punish Gaza’s population while responding to security threats.
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| At least two Palestinians were killed and two wounded in Israeli air raids on Sunday [AFP] |
Late on Sunday, at least two Palestinians were killed and two critically wounded in Israeli air raids in the northern Gaza Strip.


