Power cuts plunge Gaza hospitals into darkness as Israelโs attacks persist
Omar Abu Atwa, a 30-year-old driver, was walking home from work one day in central Gaza last month when an explosion shook the street around him. Bloodied and confused, he was taken to Al-Aqsa Martyr
Omar Abu Atwa, a 30-year-old driver, was walking home from work one day in central Gaza last month when an explosion shook the street around him. Blo
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera โWhy This Matters
The collapse of Gazaโs power grid during sustained Israeli strikes isnโt just a humanitarian crisisโitโs a calculated amplification of medical collapse. Hospitals, already strained by mass casualties, now face the added threat of being forced into darkness, where ventilators fail, incubators shut down, and emergency surgeries become impossible. This isnโt collateral damage; itโs a systemic breakdown that forces doctors to make impossible choices between treating patients and navigating a blackout.
Background Context
Gazaโs power infrastructure has been a flashpoint for over a decade, with Israel restricting fuel imports and electricity supply as part of its blockade. Before October 7, hospitals relied on a fragile network of generators and limited power from Israelโs grid, but those systems were already operating at 50% capacity due to shortages. The current escalation has severed even these tenuous lifelines, leaving facilities like Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospitalโonce a lifeline for the northโreliant on dwindling reserves as Israeli forces advance.
What Happens Next
The immediate risk is mass casualties from treatable conditions like kidney failure or childbirth complications, as medical staff are forced to ration care under flashlight. Over time, the failure of critical infrastructure could accelerate displacement, as families flee areas where hospitals can no longer function. International aid groups may attempt to deliver generators or fuel, but the Israeli militaryโs control over ground access and airspace makes large-scale interventions nearly impossible.
Bigger Picture
This isnโt an isolated incident but part of a broader pattern in modern urban warfare, where power grids and healthcare systems are weaponized to pressure civilian populations. From Syriaโs sieges to Yemenโs blockade, the tactic of cutting essential services has become a hallmark of asymmetric conflicts, designed to erode public resilience. Gazaโs current crisis underscores how these strategies now intersect with the realities of a densely populated, already-vulnerable enclave.

