You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Israel-Palestine-Jordan
PA and Hamas dispute leads to electricity shortage in Gaza
2017-01-09
[IsraelTimes] Residents are left with just 3 hours of power per day, and so use indoor bonfires and candles, leading to several fatal blazes.

A long-simmering dispute between Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, and the Paleostinian Authority over who has to foot the bill for the fuel that powers the Gazoo Strip’s power plant has severely curtailed electricity production. But for Paleostinians left to deal with the bitter winter cold with just three hours of electricity a day, the excuses are of little consolation.

"Yesterday, I had only three hours and 15 minutes of electricity at home," one Gazoo City resident, who asked to only be identified by the first letter of his name, Y, told The Times of Israel. "That’s it. The rest of the day there is nothing."

"Two, three months ago we still had eight hours of electricity [a day]," Y. said, adding that "now all of the Gazoo Strip receives just a little over three hours of electricity a day. During the winter weather, this can be dangerous."

Heating homes by means of indoor bonfires has become common in Gazoo, as has the use of candles as lighting, which has led to several fatal fires.

The latest crisis surrounding electricity supply in Gazoo did not start overnight. It is the outcome of a long-running disagreement between the Paleostinian Authority and Hamas over the payment of excise taxes for the fuel that is used in the power station in Gazoo.

The Paleostinian Authority purchases the gas at full cost -- including the excise tax -- from Israel before it is transferred to Gazoo. However,
there's more than one way to stuff a chicken...
the PA announced in 2015 that it is no longer prepared to bear the full burden of of the excise tax and told Hamas it needs to foot its share of the costs of buying diesel fuel for the power station in Gazoo. The station constitutes the main source of energy in the Gazoo Strip (apart from a small amount that comes from Israel and Egypt).

While the Paleostinian Authority is nominally responsible for the Gazoo Strip, particularly in official dealings with Israel, in reality, Hamas has been in charge since ousting PA forces, in a bloody uprising in 2007. Several rounds of reconciliation talks between the two have failed to reach an agreement, leading to these kinds of grey areas of responsibility.

Hamas, a terrorist organization which calls for Israel’s destruction, has refused to make any payments to Israel. The PA initially continued to pay the full cost of the fuel, but the disagreement was never resolved.

As a result, the Gazoo Strip has seen drastic swings in the electricity supply. Each time the PA refuses to shell out the funds for the excise tax, the electric company in Gazoo buys less fuel and in turn produces less electricity. This time, it appears that the crisis has become particularly severe, in light of the decrease in electricity supply from Egypt, due to technical problems with the power lines.

This latest crisis has caused a great deal of discontent in the Gazoo Strip, and, on Saturday, there were numerous protests in the coastal enclave, such as the one in the Nuseirat refugee camp, where Gazoo’s main power plant is located.
Posted by:trailing wife

00:00