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Mohammad Al Shanti is forced to travel nearly four miles to Al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza to fill up plastic bottles with water. It’s only enough for his family’s most basic needs. Water is a voracious energy user because it is so heavy, said Kellogg Schwab, a water and public health professor at Johns Hopkins University. Every liter weighs 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds). Moving water around “takes a massive amount of energy,” Schwab told CNN. We don’t wash our clothes, we save every little drop,” he told CNN, describing the water situation as “catastrophic.” Five short documentaries that capture the diversity & rich history of its deeply rooted LGBTQ+ community. One vital supply missing from the aid convoys has been fuel. Without it, Gaza’s water system has crumbled.

dirty, salty water as the fuel needed to run Gazans forced to drink dirty, salty water as the fuel needed to

There's a lot of bottom-shaming stuff," DeWitt agrees. "The fact of it is, it's a place where poop comes out, and you're using it as a sexual organ -- that can cause spinning out in terms of being obsessed with being clean. People definitely overdo it, both enemas and wiping." Even using wet wipes can leave skin dry and irritated because of their fragrances, so DeWitt advises using wet toilet paper instead. Gazans are now living on less than 3 liters of water a day, according to the UN, far below the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) recommended 50 liters as the absolute minimum needed to meet basic needs, including drinking, cooking and hygiene.Water production in Gaza is currently at 5% of normal levels, according to a UNICEF report from October 17, citing the Palestinian Water Authority (PWA).

dirty and dangerous: What it’s like on the fire frontline Hot, dirty and dangerous: What it’s like on the fire frontline

As the water system collapses, some Gazans have been forced to drink dirty, salty water, sparking concerns of a health crisis and fears that people could start dying from dehydration. But Gaza received just 60,000 liters of water on Saturday, Ghunaim said. To cover the bare necessities of the 2.3 million people living in the enclave requires 33 million liters every day, he told CNN.Finding clean water is becoming an all-consuming – and increasingly difficult – challenge for many Gazans.

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