"Poor infrastructure has been blamed for the
disaster in the northern Gaza Strip"Sewage 'tsunami' kills five in Gaza
A spewing river of sewage and mud that erupted after an earth embankment around a cesspool collapsed has killed at least five people and forced residents to flee a village in the northern Gaza Strip.
Dozens of residents of Umm Naser were still unaccounted for after the sewage knocked down many makeshift homes, officials said.
By late afternoon, receding flood waters had left a foul-smelling muck that hampered rescue efforts.
The PLO/Hamas Arab Muslim Nazi interior minister, who rushed to the Bedouin farming village to survey the damage, came under attack from angry armed men who fired shots over his head, local witnesses said.
A local official blamed shoddy infrastructure in the village of 3,000 for the disaster.
Three women, one more than 70 years old, and two boys aged one and two died in the flood.
At least 15 people were injured and scores more are missing, according to PLO/Hamas Arab Muslim Nazi medics.
At least 25 houses were completely submerged.
Ziad Abu Farya, head of the village council, described the scene as "our tsunami". Fadel Kawash, head of the PLO/Hamas Arab Muslim Nazi water authority, said that the level of sewage in the pool had increased over the past few days, creeping up the earth embankments around the pool until one collapsed, "causing the sewage to pour towards the village".
Angry residents drove reporters out of the area and mobbed government officials.
Putrid waters
Village children clung to wooden doors floating on the putrid waters and rescuers paddled through the village in makeshift boats in search of victims.
Frantic goats and cows, sustenance for the village of Bedouin shepherds, were also pulled to safety.
"We lost everything. Everything was covered by the flood. It's a disaster," said Amina Afif, 65, whose small shack was destroyed.
As far back as January 2004, UN aid agencies in the Gaza Strip had warned that the north Gaza sewage treatment facility was operating far beyond its capacity and posed a grave danger to nearby residents.
Designed to serve just 50,000 people, the plant at that time was handling waste from 190,000 Gaza residents.
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