Current:Home > NewsGaza under Israeli siege: Bread lines, yellow water and nonstop explosions -FundTrack
Gaza under Israeli siege: Bread lines, yellow water and nonstop explosions
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 09:36:26
KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip (AP) — There are explosions audible in the cramped, humid room where Azmi Keshawi shelters with his family in Gaza’s southern city of Khan Younis. The bombardments keep coming closer, he says, and they’re wreaking death and destruction.
Keshawi, his wife, two sons, two daughters and tiny grandchildren are trying to survive inside.
Their sense of desperation has grown 11 days into the Israel-Hamas war. Food is running out and Israel has so far stopped humanitarian attempts to bring it in.
The family hasn’t showered in days since Israel cut off Gaza’s water and fuel supplies. They get drinking water from the U.N. school, where workers hand out jerrycans of water from Gaza’s subterranean aquifer to desperate families. It tastes salty. The desalination stations stopped working when the fuel ran out.
Keshawi boils the water and hopes for the best.
“How the hell did the entire world just watch and let Israel turn off the water?” said Keshawi, 59, a U.S.-educated researcher at the International Crisis Group, his voice rising with anger.
That the world is watching, he says, saddens him the most.
Sometimes there are too many airstrikes to forage for food. But his family’s stocks are dwindling, so he tries to get bread when he can. On Thursday, the line for one loaf was chaotic and took five hours. Several bakeries have been bombed. Others have closed because they don’t have enough water or power. Authorities are still working out the logistics for a delivery of humanitarian aid into Gaza from Egypt.
Keshawi has money to buy food for his grandchildren. But there’s hardly anything to buy. The children often eat stale bread and drink powdered milk. A few Palestinians who own chicken farms and have gas stoves run take-out kitchens from their homes, asking customers to wait for hours to get a meager plate of rice and chicken. Keshawi wishes he didn’t see the water they used — liquid with a disconcerting yellow hue, from a donkey cart. He didn’t tell his wife.
“It’s not the time to be picky,” he said from his friend’s house where he sought refuge after heeding an Israeli military evacuation order for Gaza City. “We don’t know if anything will be available tomorrow.”
The toilet in the house is nearly full to the brim with urine. What water they can spare to wash the dishes they then use to flush waste down the toilet. Without enough food or water, they don’t use the bathroom much.
The nights are the hardest, he said. When airstrikes crash nearby and explosions light up the sky, the adults muster what little resolve they have to soothe the children.
“Boom!” they yell and cheer when the bombs thunder. The babies laugh.
But older kids are terrified. They see the news and know that the airstrikes have crushed thousands of homes and killed over 3,000 Palestinians in Gaza so far, including dozens of people a mere kilometer (half mile) from the house they thought would offer safety.
Keshawi said he tries to put on a brave face. But often, he said, he can’t stop weeping.
“It’s really killing me,” he said. “It really breaks my heart.”
___
DeBre reported from Jerusalem.
veryGood! (78)
Related
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- All the Surprising Rules Put in Place for the 2024 Olympics
- Whale surfaces, capsizes fishing boat off New Hampshire coast
- Army Reserve punishes officers for dereliction of duty related to Maine shooting
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Donald Trump and Bryson DeChambeau aim to break 50 on YouTube: Five takeaways
- The Founder For Starry Sky Wealth Management Ltd
- Whale surfaces, capsizes fishing boat off New Hampshire coast
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Measure aimed at repealing Alaska’s ranked voting system still qualifies for ballot, officials say
Ranking
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- NFL Star Joe Burrow Shocks Eminem Fans With Slim Shady-Inspired Transformation
- 10 to watch: Beach volleyballer Chase Budinger wants to ‘shock the world’ at 2024 Olympics
- Measure aimed at repealing Alaska’s ranked voting system still qualifies for ballot, officials say
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The best electric SUVs of 2024: Top picks to go EV
- Kamala Harris hits campaign trail in Wisconsin as likely presidential nominee, touts past as prosecutor
- Olympic gold-medal swimmers were strangers until living kidney donation made them family
Recommendation
Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
IOC awards 2034 Winter Games to Salt Lake City. Utah last hosted the Olympics in 2002
Chet Hanks says he's slayed the ‘monster’: ‘I'm very much at peace’
North Dakota judge will decide whether to throw out a challenge to the state’s abortion ban
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
Haason Reddick continues to no-show Jets with training camp holdout, per reports
What is the fittest city in the United States? Top 10 rankings revealed
Army Reserve punishes officers for dereliction of duty related to Maine shooting