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Written by BBC News BBC News
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Category: News News
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Published: 11 November 2008 11 November 2008
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Last Updated: 11 November 2008 11 November 2008
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Created: 11 November 2008 11 November 2008
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The Islamist group Hamas, which controls Gaza, said the rockets were a
response to an Israeli raid that killed six gunmen on 4 November.
Gaza's only power plant was closed on Monday, after Israel stopped fuel deliveries.
Aid agencies estimate the new deliveries of fuel will run out within a day-and-a-half.
Fuel shortages
In a statement, Unwra spokesman Christophen Gunness said food
distribution operations would end on Thursday unless Israeli
authorities allowed deliveries of wheat, luncheon meat, powdered milk
and cooking oil without delay.
"This is both a physical as well as a mental punishment of the
population - of mothers and parents trying to feed their children - who
are being forced to live hand to mouth," he said.
"It is a further illustration of the barbarity of this inhuman blockade."
"It is also shameful and unacceptable that the largest humanitarian
actor in Gaza is being forced into yet another cycle of crisis
management," Mr Gunness added.
Earlier, the UN described fuel shortages in the Gaza Strip as "real and serious".
Most of Gaza City was plunged into darkness on Monday evening after the
Nusseirat power plant - the only one inside the territory - was forced
to shut down because fuel shipments had been blocked by Israel for
nearly a week.
The facility depends on supplies of industrial fuel, mainly paid for by
foreign donors, but transported through the Israeli-run Nahal Oz
terminal.
A delivery of 800,000 litres of fuel was received on Tuesday, a
European Commission spokeswoman said, and more is expected in the
coming days.
The Nusseirat power plant provides about a quarter of the Gaza Strip's
electricity and more than half the electricity used by the city itself.
Most of the rest of the supply comes directly via power lines from
Israel.
Reconciliation stalled
Meanwhile, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has used a
speech on the fourth anniversary of the death of his predecessor,
Yasser Arafat, to blame Hamas for another failed attempt at
reconciliation with his Fatah movement.
Hamas boycotted Egyptian-sponsored reconciliation talks that were to
have begun in Cairo on Monday, saying security forces loyal to Mr Abbas
had arrested hundred of its members in the West Bank.
"Now it's clear who is not serious... Arab countries should intercede
and condemn Hamas," Mr Abbas told a demonstration in the West Bank town
of Ramallah.
He also accused Hamas, which seized control of Gaza in June 2007, of
putting its own interests before those of the Palestinian people.
"We will not call anybody a non-believer or traitor, as they do," he said.
"They must return to the fold of the homeland and think about the
interests of the homeland. Regrettably, they lost that opportunity."
A Hamas spokesman said Mr Abbas had "not shown good intentions...
towards a successful future for Palestinian national dialogue".
"We can't build a promising future for national unity on this harsh,
contradictory speech which was full of hatred toward Hamas," Fawzi
Barhoum told the Associated Press.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7722948.stm
Published: 2008/11/11 17:25:10 GMT
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