A Christian Aid partner has launched a rescue operation after a flood of sewage swept through a village in the northern Gaza Strip killing at least five people.

A Christian Aid partner has launched a rescue operation after a flood of sewage swept through a village in the northern Gaza Strip killing at least five people.

The devastation occurred when a waste water treatment pool burst its banks next to the village of Um Nasser in Beit Lahiya last Tuesday, forcing around 1,500 people to flee their homes.

Two elderly women, two children and a teenage girl were among the dead while a further eleven people are still missing. At least 250 houses were damaged by the flood.

The United Nations Relief Works Agency has set up a temporary camp with tents and food rations for displaced families.

Christian Aid partner the Palestinian Medical Relief Society was affected by the flooding but has now been cleared and is providing healthcare services to those injured in the flood.

PMRS is also assisting with the rescue and relief operation and has established two teams to help evacuate people, search for those still missing under the sewage and transfer the injured to hospital.

Mohammed Yaghi, head of the PMRS clinic in the village, comments, “This has been a tough day for everyone. It was particularly heartbreaking when an 11-month-old child whom I had treated at the clinic just two days before for a common cold was found dead in his house along with his grandmother.”

The search for bodies thought to be trapped inside the houses destroyed by the flood continues.

PMRS is especially concerned about the public health implications for the displaced due to a lack of clean drinking water, the risk of water-borne diseases and the prevalence of mosquitoes.

“Israel’s prolonged closure of Gaza’s borders has also prevented the entry of spare parts and materials needed for construction and repairs,” said Helen Murray, Christian Aid emergency advocacy officer.

The sewage facility was built in the 1970s to serve around 50,000 people but has struggled to cope as the local population has grown to nearly 200,000. Construction of a new plant had been planned but Israel has not allowed work to be carried out on the new site.