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Matt Beynon Rees is an award-winning crime novelist who lives in Jerusalem. The French magazine L’Express called him “the Dashiell Hammett of Palestine.” As a journalist, Matt covered the Middle East for over a decade for Time, The Scotsman and Newsweek. He was born in Newport, Wales, in 1967 and studied at Oxford University and the University of Maryland. His first Soho novel, THE COLLABORATOR OF BETHLEHEM, won the Crime Writers Association's New Blood Dagger. The Omar Yussef series continues with A GRAVE IN GAZA in 2008 and THE SAMARITAN'S SECRET in Feb. 2009.

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    What’s floating in the Dead Sea?

    If you’ve ever slathered your skin in the healing, mineral-rich mud of the Dead Sea, you may want to stop reading now.

    More than 8 million gallons of sewage from East Jerusalem is pumped downhill to the Dead Sea, raw and untreated, every day. That’s not just a little icky for those of us who like to float in the lowest body of water on earth. It’s also an environmental catastrophe, and potentially another flashpoint in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.

    “It’s the greatest environmental hazard in the country,” said Naomi Tzur, Jerusalem’s deputy mayor, who heads the planning and environmental committees on the city council. “I don’t sleep easily at night knowing that this is happening.”

    The Dead Sea is one of the contenders to be named among the Seven Natural Wonders of the World in an online poll that organizers estimate will draw a billion voters by the time results are announced next year. But its location also puts it in the firing line of a conflict almost as bitter as the sea’s highly saline water.

    In 1993, the German government offered to finance a sewage-treatment plant for East Jerusalem. The plant was to be run jointly by Israel and the Palestinian Authority, which was founded that year as part of the Oslo Accords. The Palestinians refused to accept a joint project because they didn’t want to recognize any Israeli authority over the territory occupied since 1967.

    Read the rest of this post on my blog The Man of Twists and Turns.

    Posted on Sunday, June 27th, 2010 at 11:11 am

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