
The post came in reply to a post from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), saying that freshwater supplies in Gaza were "severely limited and polluted."
Gaza is receiving over 70,000 cubic meters of water per day, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) claimed in an X/Twitter post on Sunday.
The post came in reply to a post from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), saying that freshwater supplies in Gaza were "severely limited and polluted," due to a collapse in sewage infrastructure.
COGAT described UNRWA's claims as being "false narratives."
COGAT coordinates Gaza water line repair
"The facts speak for themselves," COGAT said. "When a water line issue was reported last week, we coordinated a rapid repair to restore full functionality immediately."
COGAT also said that there were four active pipelines leading into Gaza: Nahal Oz, Bani Suheila, Birkat Sa'id, and the Emirati line.
"While local groundwater faces challenges, we continue to repair infrastructure, even during combat, to ensure civilians access to safe, potable water," COGAT claimed.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Woman leaves bachelorette trip after trusting her gut about sketchy men partying it up with friends - 2
'Zootopia 2' movie reviews: A heartwarming, hysterical and earnest 'ode to community' - 3
10 Activities to Lift Your Consume and Bust Your Stomach - 4
Cases of norovirus are on the rise just in time for the holiday season - 5
Which Diet Prompts the Incomparable Wellbeing Results?
Plane Passenger Allegedly Includes ‘Bomb Threat’ in Hotspot Network Name, Forces Flight to Make Emergency Landing
Watch India launch advanced military satellite on rocket's 1st flight since May 2025 failure
Looking for under-the-radar adventures? Try Norway's Vesterålen
NASA astronauts take new moonsuit for a swim | Space photo of the day for Nov. 28, 2025
The World's Dazzling Regular Miracles
Pick Your #1 Kind Of Treat
I decided to become a single mother by choice. I wasn't ready to stop dating.
If evolution is real, then why isn’t it happening now? An anthropologist explains that humans actually are still evolving
Hamas hands over another body in the Gaza Strip












