Gaza garbage strike sparks health fears in strip
GAZA - A municipal workers strike left mounting piles of refuse in Gazas streets on Saturday and officials said they feared a sanitary catastrophe amid a continued western aid boycott of the Palestinian government. Thousands of municipal workers began a strike last week in protest at being unpaid for months by the Palestinian government.
Took a week to notice the garbage? ... | When there is a strike, it brings us very near to a health, environmental and sanitary catastrophe, said Gaza Citys mayor Majed Abu Ramadan. The threat is real.
Residents said workers had not made garbage collections for almost a week. My children have become sick because of the bad smell and the mosquitoes, said 50-year-old Abu Adel.
Any chance that you'll talk to your gummint 'bout being more reasonable? | Abu Ramadan said councils depended on money they collected from residents to pay their workers, but the continued financial squeeze meant people were not able to pay their bills. This has resulted in the municipality being unable to sustain the salaries for its 1,800 employees, these employees who serve the 600,000 residents of Gaza City, he said.
An official with the main Gaza City municipality said thousands of workers from most local councils in the strip had joined the strike.
Palestinian Finance Minister Salam Fayyad told the European Union on Wednesday the unity government needed more than $1.3 billion in international aid this year to avert a devastating humanitarian crisis. The EU, the Palestinians biggest donor, has continued to pay subsistence allowances to 150,000 families.
None of whom are garbage collectors. |
Posted by: Steve White 2007-04-15 |