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Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Venture Capital   来源:Technology  查看:  评论:0
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Earlier on Thursday, angry and hungry Palestinians crowded outside bakeries in Gaza in a desperate attempt to obtain bread, but the situation quickly descended into chaos, forcing distribution to halt.It forced most bakeries to suspend operations, citing a lack of security.

Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

Many residents across Gaza voiced growing frustration over the aid distribution method and criticised the WFP, which oversees food deliveries.Some called for an immediate shift from distributing baked bread to handing out flour directly at a rate of one sack per family.Locals argue that distributing flour would allow families to bake at home or in tents - which, they say, would be safer than waiting at the overcrowded aid centres.

Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

Palestinians on the ground have told of the deepening humanitarian crisis and the collapse of basic services facing people living among the fighting or forced from their homes, as the IDF continues to ramp up its military operations against Hamas.From a displacement camp in southern Gaza's al-Mawasi, Abd al-Fatah Hussein told BBC News over WhatsApp that the situation is getting worse due to the number of people in the area.

Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

The father-of-two said there is "no room" in al-Mawasi, where people ordered by the Israeli military to leave their homes are being told to go for safety.

"There is no electricity, no food, insufficient potable water, and no available medicine," he said.US President Donald Trump said on Friday that "a lot of people were starving" in Gaza. The Israeli government has repeatedly rejected claims there is a food shortage in Gaza.

Victoria Rose, a British reconstructive surgeon working at Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that her team were "exhausted" and staff had lost a "considerable amount of weight"."The children are really thin," she said. "We've got a lot of youngsters whose teeth have fallen out.

"A lot of them have quite significant burn injuries and with this level of malnutrition they're so much more prone to infection and they've got so much less capacity to heal."Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said on 5 May that Israel was preparing an "

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