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Ma'an News, Oct 30, 2008 This article was originally published by Ma'an News and is republished with permission.
Internationals who sailed on a siege-breaking ship to the Gaza Strip from Cyprus toured the village of Umm al-Nasser - the scene of a horrific 2007 sewage flood that left five Palestinians dead - in the northern Gaza Strip on Thursday. During their tour of the village, the international visitors got a first-hand look at the suffering experienced by the residents of Gaza due to the Israeli blockade on the Strip. Five people were killed in Umm al-Nasser in 2007 when a massive sewage cesspool burst its banks, flooding the village with untreated sewage-water. Officials in the village say that because of Israel's restrictions on imports of building supplies into Gaza, the banks of the sewage pool still cannot be properly repaired. Locals fear a similar disaster could befall them again, especially as the approaching winter season begins to bring heavy rainfall to the region. Twenty-seven visitors from 13 countries sailed to Gaza from Cyprus on Wednesday in defiance Israel's ongoing blockade of the tiny coastal territory. The Palestinian-International Campaign Against the Siege organized the tour to Umm al-Nasser. They were received by village council head Ziad Abu Thuryya and a crowd of Palestinians from the village. The international visitors also toured a local clinic affiliated with the Palestinian Medical Relief Society.
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