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Workers repair electricity wires next to a Hamas observation point targeted by Israeli tank fire on the eastern outskirts of Gaza City, near the border with Israel. Image Credit: AFP

Gaza- The lights are going back on in the Gaza Strip, in a rare piece of positive news from the blockaded Palestinian enclave.

In recent days, residents say they have received up to 16 hours of mains electricity a day, compared with as little as four previously.

UN humanitarian officials report an average of between nine and 11 hours per day since October 25.

It is the result of a landmark six-month deal, part of efforts to end unrest along the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip that has raised fears of a fourth war since 2008.

The deal emerged amid ongoing indirect negotiations between Hamas and Israel, mediated by the UN and Egypt, in hopes of reaching a long-term truce.

The fuel agreement, whose first deliveries arrived on October 9, has provided the most power to Gaza residents in years.

The tentative results are showing in the enclave’s beleaguered economy: companies able to work longer, restaurant costs falling, and even an increase in ice cream.

Margins are tight for Kamal Fattoum’s two-man box factory in Gaza City and his meagre profits would evaporate if he were to run a generator.

He only uses the heavy equipment needed for the hours he has mains electricity, so his work day had shortened in tandem with Gaza’s dwindling power supply.

The uptick has had an immediate impact.

“Instead of working for four hours we can work for eight or more,” he explained.

The deliveries are sent through Israel, which agreed on condition the United Nations monitors them to avoid interference by Hamas, which it accuses of diverting humanitarian aid.

The deal was made without the backing of the internationally recognised Palestinian National Authority, based in the occupied West Bank and run by president Mahmoud Abbas.

Abbas lost control of Gaza to Hamas in a 2007 near civil war, prompting the Israel occupation regime’s crippling blockade.

Egypt had also kept its border with Gaza mostly closed in recent years before opening it in May.

UN officials and rights groups have called for the blockade to be lifted, saying it has helped impoverish the two million people stuck in the cramped enclave.

Hamas-backed border protests and clashes that began on March 30 have led to more than 215 Palestinians and one Israeli being killed.

International powers have traditionally sought Abbas’s support before carrying out aid programmes in Gaza, but he opposed this agreement, saying it legitimises Hamas’s rule.

He has also imposed punitive measures on Gaza.

Unable to get Abbas to back the deal, UN envoy Nickolay Mladenov and others worked around him.

The result is rates of power the likes of which some Gazans say they can barely remember.

Coupled with pre-existing electricity delivered from Israel, Gaza now has about 200 megawatts a day, said Mohammad Thabet, spokesman for the Gazan energy company.

It is short of the 400-500 megawatts needed for full power, but enough to see service double or more.

“We were paying around 800 shekels ($215) a day for 12 hours power from a generator,” said Karam Al Tali, deputy manager of a restaurant in Gaza City.

Now they only need to buy three hours of power from a generator thanks to the increase in mains electricity, he said.

The kebabs and sandwiches they sell go for just 14 shekels ($3.50), he pointed out.

Nearby a corner shop now has enough electricity to power freezers - meaning they are stocking ice cream again.

The electricity deal may yet be a false dawn. Western diplomats say there can be no major rebuilding of Gaza while Hamas remains in control.

Electricity shortages will likely intensify again as winter kicks in and more energy-sapping heaters are switched on.

Mahed Dahdour, 38, said the impact for his building company would only be significant if Israel eased the blockade.

“Electricity without money is nothing,” he said.

But for now residents are taking advantage of the power boost - with at least one downside.

Umm Yousuf, who lives in a crumbling house with her five kids in Gaza City, said of her children: “They used to study more. Now you can’t even talk to them - they are watching the TV!”