''It is cold, there is no power, and I am charging my
computer using a car battery in order to get this message out. It is so
cold in Gaza that everyone has cold feet and a cold nose. A new storm is
hitting this besieged enclave. There is no electricity, and shortages
of water, fuel, and vital services mean people just sit and wait for the
unknown.''
''Tens of houses east of Gaza City, in the northern Gaza Strip, in Khan
Younes and Rafah are flooded with rain today. The sewage system cannot
function and Gaza municipalities announced a state of emergency. Schools
and most shops are shut, there is no traffic and few people are walking
in the street.
Gaza City’s garbage trucks have been at a standstill due to the
ongoing fuel shortage. I’d gotten used to the bright orange truck that
usually passes by, sounding its horn, a sign for all my neighbors to
bring out their garbage for collection....''
That is what journalist blogger Mohammed Omer of Rafah wrote yesterday on his blog Rafah Today -
read the rest of his post here.
Update: Ma'an News adds to this that on Friday that the flooding was worst in the northern Gaza Strip, where hundreds fled
their homes and water levels reached 40-50 cm in some parts, forcing
residents to use boats to navigate their neighborhoods. The Gaza
government said in a statement on Friday that so far 2,825 people have
been evacuated from their homes, reaching a total of 458 families. The
evacuated were being sheltered in schools across the Strip, the
statement was reported by Gaza-based Safa News Agency as saying, as
Hamas civil defense authorities rushed to evacuate
flooded homes.

Gaza
Minister of Health Mufid al-Mukhalalati declared a state of "extreme
emergency" as all emergency devices and ambulance crews were put on a
state of high alter in all regions of the Gaza Strip.
The Israeli Coordinator of Government
Activities in the Territories announced Thursday that Israel would open the
Kerem Shalom crossing to
allow for the transport into Gaza of gas for heating houses and water
pumps for coping
with floods.