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Radios help Gazans keep track of fate of their families

BEFORE war broke out in Gaza, Mahmud al-Daoudi, 33, could never have imagined the radio sets gathering dust in his shop would be in such high demand, offering his customers a precious link with the outside world.

Power cuts have long been a part of everyday life, but the besieged territory's 2.4 million people are now enduring long blackouts after Israel cut off electricity and fuel supplies.

Its relentless assault has killed more than 19,450 Gazans, mostly women and children, according to the territory's Health Ministry.

Israel began its devastating air and ground offensive following the Oct 7 Hamas attacks, which killed around 1,140 people in southern Israel, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.

It is now impossible to plug in computers or television sets, recharge phones or access the Internet without generators or solar panels, a luxury few Gazans can afford.

But to keep up with the
news, there's always the battery-powered radio.

"We had a full stock but we've been completely out of them since the first week" of the war, Daoudi said.

With the phone and Internet cuts, "radio is the only way to find out what's going on", he said.

The long battery life is another plus, he said from his store in Rafah, in the southern end of the territory.

Before the war, a radio cost around 25 shekels, now they go for around 60 shekels.

"We've even resold the broken radios people returned to us."

When the radio sets disappeared from the shelves, customers asked for old telephones with built-in radios and torches, a welcome help when night falls.

"Now we're running out of phones."

It's impossible to order new stock, with only limited humanitarian aid trickling into the territory.

"People want to follow the news, hear where the shelling is taking place and find out about the fate of their families," said Hussein Abu Hashem, who has run out of radios at his shop, too.

According to the United Nations, 1.9 million Palestinians have been displaced since the start of the war, around 85 per cent of the population.

Many are living in makeshift camps in the south of the territory where they lack basic supplies.

"I don't know what's happening around us, where the strikes are, which houses are targeted, who's alive, who the martyrs are," Umm Ibrahim said in the southern city of Khan Yunis.

"We want to receive news from anywhere in Gaza.

"When my battery runs out, I walk around the camp and listen out for other people's radios."

Stations such as BBC Arabic and Al Jazeera have launched channels to help keep displaced people up to date with the news.

Some Gazans, like 75-year-old Hebrew-speaker Mohammed Hassouna, manage to pick up
the news from Israeli radio stations.

He said it allows him to keep up with the latest "from the Israeli side".

"I keep my children and neighbours informed," he said.

Outside his tent, Salah Zorob, 37, spends his time flicking through radio stations on his mobile phone.

"The world is moving forward with technology, but here in Gaza, we're moving backwards.

"They're going to take us back to the Stone Age."


* The writer is from Agence France-Presse

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