Civilingeniør Haitham Besaiso deler sin dagbog som indbygger i Gaza med FN-nyhedsbureauet IRIN – grum dagligdag i bestandig frygt og med talrige afsavn præger tilværelsen i det konfliktramte område på størrelse med Langeland.
GAZA CITY, 7 August 2014 (IRIN): There are about 10 seconds, or at least that is what it feels like, between the launching of the missile and the devastating crash of the explosion.
They are the darkest moments of my life. As the sound of the falling missile grows, my stomach lurches, I close my eyes and think of my family. The tape of my life flashes before my eyes as we wait to find out if this is the end.
Then the explosion – sometimes a distant crack, others a devastating boom. I breathe a sigh of relief; all the while knowing it is some other family’s turn to have their lives destroyed.
Yet the reprieve is only ever temporary; these moments have been repeated dozens of times every night for the past month as Israel has pounded Gaza, the small Palestinian enclave I call home.
Abandon to sleep regularly
During the attacks, you abandon the idea of sleeping regularly; the continuous air strikes and shelling make it impossible.
Lying in your own bed next to a window increases the risk of damage if the windows shatter so I have a temporary mattress under the staircase where I lie down – reducing the chances, ever so slightly, that the next bomb will be my last.
Occasionally, the exhaustion is such that I slip into a sleep so deep that I don’t notice explosions even metres from my home.
It was one such night last week that I awoke to learn that the mosque I pray in and the university I studied at had been hit – both partially destroyed by attacks in the night.
I had spent over five years at the prestigious Islamic University of Gaza, both as a student and later as a teaching assistant. When I learned the news I was overcome with grief – it felt as if my life was being eliminated, my most cherished memories systematically destroyed.
Nowhere is safe
In a place as small as Gaza (på størrelse med Langeland, red.) nowhere is safe.
My neighbourhood, in the west of Gaza City near the beach, was not in the centre of the ground offensive but it was not much luckier than the rest. A residential building a few metres from my home was destroyed, while the area has been badly damaged.
Since Gaza’s only power station was destroyed, we have been plunged into darkness. The lucky ones were getting electricity for one or two hours a day, but in recent days even that has disappeared.
My family has a diesel generator that we occasionally turn on to check the news but it is expensive and fuel is sparse. The rest of the time we sit, often listening to the local radio news.
Every report brings with it new tragedies, civilians killed by attackers they never even saw. The more I listen, the angrier I feel that the world is just watching as we are dying. In the end, I turn off the radio.
In the house we have been running low on even basic supplies. The 72-hour ceasefire has helped ease the situation somewhat, but even now every day is a battle to get what we need to survive – drinking water and food.
Overflowing sewage (kloakker)
Læs videre på http://www.irinnews.org/report/100459/gaza-diary-life-under-israeli-assault