Common
Ground News Service - Middle East
Water shortages in West Bank and Gaza
by Robin Twite
19 November 2009
JERUSALEM - Controversy between Israelis and
Palestinians over the way water is shared was exacerbated by the recent
publication of an Amnesty International report on the water shortage
facing Palestinians. The report is highly critical of Israeli policy,
claiming that Israel denies the Palestinians their share of available
water, and says the average Palestinian consumes only a quarter of the
water of an average Israeli.
The response to the report from both sides was entirely predictable. The
Israelis refute the report’s basic premise that they are denying the
Palestinians their fair share of water. The Israeli Foreign Ministry
issued a formal statement saying that Israel had fulfilled its
obligations under the Oslo Accords and supplied all the water to which
the Palestinians are entitled.
Palestinian sources, on the other hand, praise the report. The head of
the Palestinian Water Authority said it demonstrated that his people had
been deprived of a basic right throughout the Occupation.
The question which has to asked, however, is to what extent will this
report help individual Palestinians who lack sufficient water? Although
the report makes recommendations, such as lifting the restrictions that
hamper the distribution of water in the West Bank, redressing the
favourable treatment of settlers, and lifting the Gaza blockade, the
very fact that the report is worded in such a controversial way reduces
the likelihood that its recommendations will be considered seriously by
the Israelis.
What is needed are not mutual accusations but constructive thinking
about how to solve the problem. The necessary steps towards a long-term
solution to the water shortage in the West Bank and Gaza are largely
known. They include treating the waste water of Palestinian towns and
villages and re-using it for agriculture (thereby making more fresh
water available for domestic consumers); building a large desalination
plant in Gaza to meet the needs of Gazans and one on the Mediterranean
coast to provide for the northern West Bank (something Israel has
already agreed to); and, more controversial but necessary, a
reassessment of the allocation of water from the mountain aquifers in
the area with the possible increase of water quotas for Palestinians.
The question is: why are these solutions not implemented? The problem
partly lies with the Joint Water Committee (JWC)—the formal framework
for the management of water in the region, established as part of the
Oslo agreements. Despite the fact that it is a joint Israeli-Palestinian
committee, the Palestinians protest that they are required to obtain the
approval of the JWC for all infrastructure development, while the same
is not true for water development projects in Israel. Israelis do not
need to seek Palestinian agreement even for projects that have evident
implications for the water supply in Palestine. They also claim that the
Israelis delay approval of much needed projects. In response, the
Israelis have published a list of projects which were approved by the
JWC but not implemented by the Palestinians.
The real obstacle to implementing solutions is mutual distrust. Israelis
fear that if the Palestinians get full control over their water, the
number of illegal wells would increase and the quality of the mountain
aquifers would be further impaired. Palestinians see in Israeli actions
a deliberate attempt to damage their morale and ultimately drive them
off of their land.
A first step towards solving the impasse would be to redesign the JWC so
that it is an instrument of management that serves the needs of both
parties. This could be facilitated by a third party, a major donor
perhaps, who would be present and arbitrate the disagreements. The water
needs of the both societies should be considered as one and ultimately
joint management of water in the region between the Jordan and the
Mediterranean Sea would make good sense.
A necessary step in any solution would be for both sides to take account
of the human needs of the other. Atavistic fears are at the heart of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They operate in the water sector just as
they do in other areas. The Amnesty report, though evidently driven by a
real sympathy for the Palestinians, does not really help resolve their
problems. What is called for is, rather, a serious attempt to resolve
the water shortage, in both Israel and the Palestinian Territories, in
which each side engages the other with goodwill, under the auspices of a
neutral donor.
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* Robin Twite is a former career official of the British Council now
resident in Jerusalem. For over a decade he has managed joint
Israeli/Palestinian projects dealing with environmental and water issues
under the auspices of the Israel-Palestine Center for Research and
Information (IPCRI). This article was written for the Common Ground News
Service (CGNews).
Source: Common Ground News Service (CGNews), 19 November 2009,
www.commongroundnews.org
Copyright permission is granted for publication.
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