Turkiye detains contractor after building collapses in earthquake
Turkiye detains contractor after building collapses in earthquake/node/2611492/middle-east
Turkiye detains contractor after building collapses in earthquake
Relatives warm up around a fire in front of rubble of collapsed buildings as rescue teams continue to search victims and survivors, after a 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck the border region of Turkey and Syria earlier in the week, in Kahramanmaras on February 12, 2023. (AFP)
Short Url
https://arab.news/m7hkb
Updated 11 August 2025
AP
Turkiye detains contractor after building collapses in earthquake
In 2023, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed more than 53,000 people in Turkiye and destroyed or damaged hundreds of thousands of buildings in 11 southern and southeastern provinces
Updated 11 August 2025
AP
ANKARA: Authorities on Monday detained the owner and the constructor of a residential building that collapsed during a magnitude 6.1 earthquake in northwestern Turkiye, as part of an investigation into possible negligence, an official said.
The quake struck the town of Sindirgi in Balikesir province on Sunday. It claimed the life of one elderly resident who died in the three-story apartment block that crumbled, and injured 29 other people throughout the region.
The tremor was felt as far away as Istanbul, nearly 200 km to the north, raising fears in the city of over 16 million people, which experts say is at high risk for a major earthquake.
Sundayâs quake caused 16 structures to collapse, most of them abandoned village homes, according to Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya.
The apartment building in Sindirgi was among the few inhabited structures to fall, prompting authorities to detain the owner and the constructor for questioning on suspicion of âcausing death and injury by negligence,â Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said.
Of the 29 people who were hospitalized, 19 were discharged as of Monday, Health Minister Kemal Memisoglu said. Those still hospitalized were not in serious condition, he added.
Meanwhile, more than 200 aftershocks have struck the region, the strongest measuring 4.6.Ìę
They forced many residents to spend the night outdoors and sleep in cars out of fear that their homes might collapse, the national TV broadcaster HaberTurk reported.
Turkiye sits on top of major fault lines, and earthquakes are frequent.
In 2023, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed more than 53,000 people in Turkiye and destroyed or damaged hundreds of thousands of buildings in 11 southern and southeastern provinces.Ìę
Another 6,000 people were killed in the northern parts of neighboring Syria.Ìę
The high death toll was blamed on widespread use of substandard construction methods, weak oversight and institutional failures.
UN aid chief foresees âmassive jobâ ahead on tour of ruined Gaza
UN relief coordinator Tom Fletcher: Gaza residents are âtelling me most of all they want dignityâ
Updated 8 min 57 sec ago
AFP
JERUSALEM: The United Nationsâ aid chief took stock of the monumental task of restoring basic necessities in the devastated Gaza Strip on Saturday, and Israel received the remains of another October 7 hostage as a ceasefire entered its second week.
In a short convoy of white UN jeeps, relief coordinator Tom Fletcher and his team wound their way through the twisted rubble of shattered homes to inspect a wastewater treatment plant in Sheikh Radwan, north of Gaza City.
âI drove through here seven to eight months ago when most of these buildings were still standing and, to see the devastation, this is a vast part of the city, just a wasteland, and itâs absolutely devastating to see,â he said.
The densely packed cities of the Gaza Strip, home to more than two million Palestinians, have been reduced to ruins by two years of bombardment and intense fighting between Hamas and the Israeli army.
Just over a week since US President Donald Trump helped broker a truce, the main border crossing to Egypt has yet to be reopened, but hundreds of trucks roll in daily via Israeli checkpoints and aid is being distributed.
Hamas has returned the final 20 surviving hostages it was holding and has begun to hand over the remains of another 28 who died.
On Friday night, it turned over a set of remains identified by Israel as Eliyahu Margalit, 75, who died in the October 2023 attack that ignited the war in Gaza. Digging latrines
Surveying the damaged pumping equipment and a grim lake of sewage at the Sheikh Radwan wastewater plant, Fletcher said the task ahead for the UN and aid agencies was a âmassive, massive job.â
The British diplomat said he had met residents returning to destroyed homes trying to dig latrines in the ruins.
âTheyâre telling me most of all they want dignity,â he said. âWeâve got to get the power back on so we can start to get the sanitation system back in place.
âWe have a massive 60 day plan now to surge in food, get a million meals out there a day, start to rebuild the health sector, bring in tents for the winter, get hundreds of thousands of kids back into school.â
According to figures supplied to mediators by the Israeli militaryâs civil affairs agency and released by the UN humanitarian office, on Thursday some 950 trucks carrying aid and commercial supplies crossed into Gaza from Israel.
Relief agencies have called for the Rafah border crossing from Egypt to be reopened to speed the flow of food, fuel and medicines, and Turkiye has a team of rescue specialists waiting at the border to help find bodies in the rubble. Hostage remains
Israelâs Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved the ceasefire but is under pressure at home to restrict access to Gaza until the remaining bodies of the hostages taken during Hamasâs brutal attacks have been returned.
On Saturday, his office confirmed that the latest body, returned by Hamas via the Red Cross on Friday night, had been identified as Margalit, the elderly farmer who was known to his friends at the Nir Oz kibbutz as âChurchill.â
âHe was a cowboy at heart, and for many years managed the cattle branch and the horse stables of Nir Oz,â said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, a support group founded by relatives of the hostages.
âHe was connected to the âRiders of the Southâ group whose members shared a love of horseback riding for over 50 years. On October 7, he went out to feed his beloved horses and was kidnapped from the stable.â
Margalit had been married with three children and three grandchildren. His daughter Nili Margalit, also taken hostage, was freed during the warâs first brief truce in November 2023.
In a statement confirming he had been identified and his remains returned to his family, Netanyahuâs office said âwe will not compromise ... and will spare no effort until we return all of the fallen abductees, down to the last one.â
Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said on Friday that the group âcontinues to uphold its commitment to the ceasefire agreement... and it will continue working to complete the full prisoner exchange process.â
Under the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, negotiated by Trump and regional mediators, the Palestinian militant group has returned all 20 surviving hostages and the remains of 10 out of 28 deceased ones.
Deceased hostage Hamas returned overnight has been identified as 75-year-old Eliyahu Margalit
The Israeli military said on Saturday that the remains had been returned to Margalitâs family
Updated 40 sec ago
AFP
JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs office said on Saturday that the body of a deceased hostage Hamas returned overnight has been identified as 75-year-old Eliyahu Margalit.
The Israeli military âinformed the family of the abductee Eliyahu Margalit... that (the body of) their loved one has been returned to Israel and his identification has been completed,â Netanyahuâs office said in a statement.
It added that âwe will not compromise... and will spare no effort until we return all of the fallen abductees, down to the last one.â
The remains of the hostage who died in captivity were transferred to Israeli security forces in Gaza via the Red Cross, and returned to Israel for identification at a medical analysis center, the premierâs office said on Friday night.
The Israeli military said on Saturday that the remains had been returned to Margalitâs family.
Margalit was killed at Kibbutz Nir Oz during Hamasâs October 7, 2023 attack that sparked the war in Gaza, according to a military statement.
âEliyahu, 75 years old at the time of his death... leaves behind a wife, three children, and grandchildren. His daughter, Nili Margalit, was also abducted and returned (under) the hostage release agreement in November 2023,â the statement said.
âHamas is required to fulfil its part of the agreement and make the necessary efforts to return all the hostages to their families,â it added.
Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said in a statement Friday night that the militant group âcontinues to uphold its commitment to the ceasefire agreement... and it will continue working to complete the full prisoner exchange process.â
Under a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas spearheaded by US President Donald Trump, the Palestinian militant group has returned all 20 surviving hostages and the remains of 10 out of 28 known deceased ones.
Under the terms of the agreement Hamas was to hand over all of the hostages, dead and alive, before Monday at 0900 GMT.
Iran says no longer bound by ârestrictionsâ on its nuclear program
The 2015 deal saw the lifting of international sanctions against the Tehran in exchange for restrictions on its nuclear program
But the pact had already been in tatters after Washington unilaterally withdrew during President Donald Trumpâs first term
Updated 18 October 2025
AFP
TEHRAN: Iran said on Saturday that it was no longer bound by restrictions on its nuclear program as a landmark 10-year deal between it and world powers expired, though Tehran reiterated its âcommitment to diplomacy.â
The 2015 deal â signed in Vienna by Iran, China, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and the United States â saw the lifting of international sanctions against the Islamic republic in exchange for restrictions on its nuclear program.
But the pact had already been in tatters after Washington unilaterally withdrew during President Donald Trumpâs first term, with Iran later pulling back from its commitments.
The reimposition last month of UN sanctions at the urging of three of the dealâs European signatories rendered the accord effectively moot.
From now on, âall of the provisions (of the deal), including the restrictions on the Iranian nuclear program and the related mechanisms are considered terminated,â Iranâs foreign ministry said in a statement on the day of the pactâs expiration.
âIran firmly expresses its commitment to diplomacy,â it added.
Western powers have long accused Iran of secretly seeking nuclear weapons â something it has repeatedly denied, insisting its nuclear program is solely for civilian purposes such as energy production.
The dealâs âtermination dayâ was set for October 18, 2025, exactly 10 years after it was enshrined in the UNâs Security Council resolution 2231.
The accord capped Iranâs uranium enrichment at 3.67 percent in exchange for sanctions relief and provided for strict supervision of its nuclear activities by the UNâs nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
But Washington left the deal in 2018 and reinstated sanctions, after which Tehran began stepping up its nuclear program.
According to the IAEA, Iran is the only country without a nuclear weapons program to enrich uranium to 60 percent. That is close to the threshold of 90 percent required for a bomb, and well above the level needed for civilian nuclear use. âIrresponsible actionsâ
In July, Iran suspended cooperation with the IAEA following the war with Israel, with Tehran pointing to the agencyâs failure to condemn Israeli and US strikes on its nuclear facilities.
The unprecedented bombing campaign by Israel and the retaliation by Iran during the 12-day war derailed ongoing nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington.
At the initiative of France, Britain and Germany, widespread UN sanctions against Iran returned into force in late September for the first time in a decade.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a letter addressed to the United Nations on Saturday that the expiration of the 2015 deal renders the sanctions ânull and void.â
Britain, France and Germany accuse Iran of not cooperating with the IAEA and would like it to return to negotiations with the United States.
âIranâs efforts to revive the exchanges (with the IAEA) that led to the agreement in Cairo were also sabotaged by the irresponsible actions of the three European countries,â the Iranian foreign ministry said in Saturdayâs statement, referring to a recent framework to resume cooperation.
DUBAI: When Sarah Ahmed stepped outside her glamping dome in Hatta, the sun was rising over the mountains and the air felt cool and still â a calm far removed from her busy mornings in the city.
It looked like something out of a nature documentary â yet it was less than 130 kilometers from her home in Dubai.
âThis is where I come with my family when I get the itch to travel,â she told Arab News. âIt feels like a real escape, but we can be back home the same day if we want to.â
For Ahmed, and many other families in the Gulf, short and simple getaways like this have become the new norm.
Kayaking in Dubai's Hatta tourist resort. (Photo courtesy of hattawadiadventure.com)
Instead of long-haul flights and packed itineraries, families and single travelers are choosing nearby destinations that are affordable and easy to reach â yet still offer a feeling of discovery.
From Omanâs cool mountain foothills to the wadis and mangroves of the UAE, this growing trend is reshaping how families spend their weekends, emphasizing connection and nature over distance and extravagance.
șÚÁÏÉçÇű is also reinventing itself as a haven for family staycations, blending breathtaking natural landscapes, immersive heritage sites, and glamping destinations.
From the majestic sandstone cliffs of AlUla and the dramatic escarpments of the Edge of the World, to the serene Al-Wahbah Crater and lush valleys near Riyadh, the Kingdom provides locations that attract families in search of adventure and relaxation.
Cultural exploration goes hand-in-hand with outdoor adventure, with destinations such as Rijal Almaa, Ushaiqer Heritage Village, and Riyadhâs historic Dirab Valley delivering an authentic taste of Arabian traditions.
Thadiq, a heritage city located 165 kilometers northwest of Riyadh, is one excellent escape for people on staycation in the Kingdom. (SPA)
Hatta in the UAE is just one of many spots in the region drawing families outdoors. In the mountain enclave, a growing number of residents are trading city weekends for cool air and glamping stays surrounded by natural scenery.
Just a 90-minute drive from Dubai, Hatta has become one of the UAEâs most accessible nature escapes, offering dome-style tents, cabins, and lodges equipped with modern comforts, set against a backdrop of dramatic peaks.
âItâs become our go-to escape,â Ahmed said. âThe drive is short, but once weâre surrounded by the mountains, it feels like weâre far away from everything.â
Families spend their days kayaking on the dam, cycling along gravel trails, or watching the sunset from their terraces.
âItâs the one place where my kids forget about screens,â said Ahmed. âThey spend the whole day outside â biking, exploring, just being kids again.â
The concept of glamping â camping with comforts â has made Hatta a popular cool-season retreat, where residents can disconnect from city life without leaving behind convenience or style.
Just a few hoursâ drive across the border, in Omanâs Jabal Akhdar, travelers are drawn to the same calm â but in a much cooler climate.
Amazing hiking trip to the stunning deserted historical Wadi Bani Habib Village in Jabal Akhdar in Oman. (Shutterstock)
igh in the Hajar range, the plateau â whose name means Green Mountain â is up to 15 degrees Celsius cooler than the coast, attracting visitors looking to escape the Gulf heat.
James Reeves, general manager of a holiday property in Jabal Akhdar, said the mountain attracts two distinct types of visitor.
During the winter season, it is mainly European travelers exploring Oman, while in summer it is a mix of local and regional guests escaping the high temperatures.
He described the area as offering âfamilies the perfect balance of escape and convenience,â with many especially drawn to the regionâs cultural and natural diversity.
The walking trails range from gentle paths suitable for children to more challenging routes that cross ancient terraces and abandoned mountain villages.
Reeves said many families also visit the falaj irrigation channels â a 1,000-year-old UNESCO-recognized water system that still nourishes farms in the area.
James Reeves, general manager of a holiday property in Omanâs Jabal Akhdar. (Supplied)
âFamilies today are looking for more than just a hotel and relaxation stay,â Reeves told Arab News. âThey want experiences that are enriching, memorable, and suitable for all ages.â
The mountain helps visitors reconnect with the past and discover a more authentic side of Oman, he said.
While convenience plays a role, Reeves said the shift also reflects something deeper â a growing desire for presence.
After years of fast-paced travel and screen-heavy routines, families are seeking experiences that feel more rooted in place and culture.
It is a pattern emerging throughout the Gulf, as more residents look for adventures close by that combine discovery, nature, and connection.
For Dubai resident Ruth Bradley, those shorter adventures have taken on a more personal meaning.
For Dubai resident Ruth Bradley and her 13-year-old son, Rafi, in Omanâs Wadi Tiwi. (Supplied)
The British-Italian mother of three decided to drive to Oman with her 13-year-old son, Rafi, over the Eid break rather than fly abroad.
âMy husband was traveling to the UK, and I didnât want to stay in Dubai,â she told Arab News.
âI felt like an adventure, but I only had four days, so I started looking at what we could do by road. I didnât want to waste time flying somewhere when we could experience amazing views on a drive through Oman.â
They spent one night in Nizwa, then continued to Wadi Tiwi, where they hiked, swam in natural pools, and jumped from cliffs surrounded by green valleys.
âIt was one of the most breathtaking things weâve ever done together,â she said. âAt one point it felt like we were in a Jurassic World movie set. I could have cried from the beauty of it all â and I saw that same wonder in Rafiâs face,â she told Arab News.
The trip ended farther south at the Ras Al-Jinz Turtle Reserve, where they watched sea turtles lay their eggs before sunrise.
Ras Al Jinz beach, also known as the 'Turtle Beach,' is one of the most popular tourist spots in Oman. (Wikimedia Commons: hotshoe!)
Bradley described the journey as safe, affordable, and easy to manage.
The guesthouses she booked â part of the Nomad Inn Oman group â cost less than 500 Emirati dirhams ($136) a night, while the biggest expense was petrol for more than 24 hours of driving.
âOman is such a safe country,â she said. âIâd do it again in a heartbeat. Being a lone parent on the road with my son was important to me â you only get 18 summers with your children, and I want to make every one count.â
Bradley said the regionâs mix of landscape and hospitality makes short road-trip adventures especially rewarding.
She is already planning to return to Wadi Tiwi in December so her husband and older children can experience it too. She hopes more destinations in the Gulf region will offer affordable options for families and adventure seekers.
The Arabian Peninsula is âespecially beautiful,â said Bradley, who hopes to show her son âevery inch of it â from Omanâs wadis to AlUla, Petra, and even Socotra one day.â
Across the region, the definition of a holiday is shifting. Families are trading the once-a-year big trip for shorter, more frequent getaways.
This shift has spurred new investment in accessible destinations like Hatta, Jebel Jais, and Al-Ain, where adventure parks, nature trails, and eco-glamping sites now cater to families looking for safety and spontaneity.
In Ras Al-Khaimah, for example, the Jebel Jais mountains now have ziplines, sky tours, and cycling trails that draw visitors from Dubai for the day.
Similarly, in Al-Ain, Jebel Hafeet Desert Park has become a favorite with families who prefer exploring ancient tombs and desert trails close to home.
General view of the ancient city of AlUla in western șÚÁÏÉçÇű. (SPA)
Farther west, șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs AlUla has evolved into one of the regionâs most sought-after short-break destinations.
Families visit for its sandstone canyons, heritage villages, and open-air museums, combining history and nature in a setting that feels remote yet remarkably accessible.
These projects â some run by local entrepreneurs, others backed by tourism authorities â are part of a larger regional movement to bring leisure closer to where people live and work.
Local guides and small businesses âare playing a huge role in this shift by creating authentic, hands-on experiences, whether itâs farm tours, cooking classes, or storytelling sessions in historic villages,â Reeves said.
This community-based approach is redefining tourism as participation rather than consumption.
A view of Al-Wahbah crater near Taif. From stark black cones to craters that plunge deep into the Earth, șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs volcanic landscape offers some of the most breathtaking geological sights in the region. (SPA photo)
This increase in local travel has also had ripple effects beyond leisure. For many Arab families, it is a way of rediscovering the beauty and diversity of their own region â from the mangroves of Abu Dhabi to the volcanic landscapes of Yemenâs Socotra.
In doing so, it fosters a sense of pride and environmental awareness.
Reeves said travelers are now staying longer â sometimes beyond 10 days â using Jabal Akhdar as a base to explore Omanâs wider natural and cultural heritage.
âPeople are realizing how much there is to see within a few hoursâ drive. And because theyâre saving on flights, theyâre investing more time in exploring.â
As new destinations across the GCC continue to emerge, the message is the same: âAdventure doesnât have to mean far away.â
Sometimes, the best memories begin just a short drive from home.
Daily struggles persist in Gaza even as ceasefire offers some respite
âLife after the ceasefire is still anxious. Is the war really over?â said Naggar, who has been displaced about a dozen times since the war began
In the coastal area of Muwasi, crowded with displaced Palestinians, Naggarâs tent has started to wear thin
Updated 17 October 2025
AP
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: Bassil Naggar can finally sleep without getting jolted awake by the sounds of Israeli airstrikes.
For Naggar and his displaced family, and for many in Gaza facing similar challenges, the ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war has provided a much-needed respite from a two-year war that has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and left much of the territory in ruins.
But many daily struggles, big and small, persist â from how to put an actual roof over oneâs head and what to wear as winter approaches, to how to secure proper food, to worries over whether the fragile ceasefire will hold.
The extent of some of the personal and communal losses has become clearer since the ceasefire went into effect on Oct. 10, allowing many to return to their neighborhoods and discover what remains of their homes.
âLife after the ceasefire is still anxious. Is the war really over?â said Naggar, who has been displaced about a dozen times since the war began.
Fueling his fears are memories of the deadly Israeli airstrikes in March that shattered an earlier truce.
In the coastal area of Muwasi, crowded with displaced Palestinians, Naggarâs tent has started to wear thin. He said his home in eastern Khan Younis has been burned. He worries about how his family can keep warm in winter.
Theyâve been surviving mostly on canned food, such as fava beans and chickpeas. He said heâs starting to see instant noodles and potato chips in the market. Prices have come down some, but remain too expensive, he added.
The World Food Program is moving âswiftly to scale up food assistance and reach families who have endured months of blockade, displacement and hunger,â spokesperson Abeer Etefa said Friday in Geneva.
âWeâre still below what we need, but weâre getting there,â Etefa said.
Challenges she cited include damaged infrastructure and the need for more open crossings into Gaza.
Earlier in the week, the entrance of desperately needed humanitarian aid into Gaza was paused for two days for the exchange of hostages and prisoners and for a Jewish holiday. Israel had also threatened to reduce the number of trucks allowed into Gaza, saying Hamas was too slow to return remaining bodies of hostages.
Under the ceasefire agreement, hundreds of trucks are to be allowed to enter Gaza daily. COGAT, the Israeli military body overseeing humanitarian aid, did not respond to a query about how many trucks carrying aid have made it into Gaza since the ceasefire.
Naggar said he hasnât noticed a significant change in the amount of aid available since the ceasefire started.
In the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that sparked the war, Hamas-led militants abducted 251 people, and killed around 1,200.
In Israelâs ensuing offensive, nearly 68,000 Palestinians were killed in Gaza, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government. The ministry maintains detailed casualty records that are seen as generally reliable by UN agencies and independent experts.
On Thursday, hardships were on display at a crowded charity kitchen in the central city of Deir Al-Balah, where scores of Palestinians held bowls and pots as they waited in front of large vats of rice. One woman displaced from Khan Younis, Fatima Shaat, said she waited for six hours for food.
Basma Abu Al-Kheir said while some goods have come in, âthere is no possibility of buying what we wantâ because prices are too high.
In Deir Al-Balah, Fida Ziyad said tomatoes, cucumbers, and eggplants are available at the market, but poultry and meat are in short supply â and all of it costs more than it did before the war. Ziyad, who lost her home in northern Gaza, said sheâs wary of what lies ahead, with many thorny issues about Gaza still unresolved.
For many, normalcy remains elusive.
After the ceasefire, Mohamed Samy went back to check on his home in Jabaliya to find it reduced to rubble. Samy, who now lives in Gaza City, said much of his situation hasnât changed since the ceasefire.
âEven drinking water, I have to walk, sometimes up to an hour, to get to the water truck.â
In August, the worldâs leading authority on food crises said Gaza City was gripped by famine, which the group warned then was likely to spread without a ceasefire and an end to restrictions on humanitarian aid. At the time, Israel rejected the report, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calling it an âoutright lie.â
Before then, aid groups had warned for months that Israelâs restrictions of food and other aid into Gaza, and its military offensive, were causing starvation among Palestinian civilians, particularly children.
Since the beginning of the ceasefire, at least nine humanitarian organizations have gradually resumed services in Gaza City and parts of northern Gaza for displaced families and returnees, according to a UN humanitarian affairs report released Thursday.
In Deir Al-Balah, Ayman Abu Saif still relies on charity kitchens for food.
âItâs either rice or pasta,â said Abu Saif, who once worked in the hospitality and restaurants fields and has been repeatedly displaced during the war.
âThe prices in the market are now more reasonable,â he said. That has led to a small win: He bought his children three apples for the first time in more than a year.
He remains uncertain about returning to where he lived in Gaza City, saying he saw a photo of his home destroyed. And itâs not just his home thatâs gone.
âThere is no water and no infrastructure. I cannot go back even if I want to.â
In a glimpse of the challenges ahead, many displaced Palestinians returning to their neighborhoods found themselves walking through collapsed, pockmarked and hollowed out buildings and sifting through debris for traces of their past lives.
Abu Saif laments the toll the war has taken on his children â and fears for their future.
âItâs good that the bloodshed has stopped, but we have lost everything,â he said.
His six-year-old-son hasnât received a proper education and probably wonât anytime soon, he said.
âI do not want my kids to think that this is what life is, to run behind a charity kitchen to get food, or walk lengthy miles to get clean water,â said Abu Saif. âThis is not reality and this is not what life is, and I am not sure life in Gaza will change soon.â