Dor Energy, the Israeli company that provides fuel to the Palestinian areas, has cut off all fuel shipments to the West Bank and Gaza, leaving Palestinians without fuel — a move which Palestinian leaders say is politically motivated.

Palestinians said the measure would deepen a humanitarian crisis brewing in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.  Gaza has already been cut off for several months, leaving taxi drivers with no option but to use cooking fuel for vehicles that were not meant to use it, and now the West Bank faces a similar dilemma.

The head of the Palestinian petrol commission, Mujahid Salama, said on Wednesday he expected petrol supplies to run out on Thursday.

"If this happens, there will be a humanitarian crisis," he said.

The stoppage has already virtually stalled the public transportation system and brought about shortages in cooking gas and other fuel derivatives. In the Gaza Strip, a higher number of mule carts than usual were seen on the streets

Salama said Palestinian officials were in touch with American and European diplomats hoping to pressure Israel to reverse the measure by Dor Energy.

The Hamas government spokesman, Ghazi Hamad, said Israel’s move was political.

"We have an agreement with that company, the problem is not the money, the problem is political. Israel is trying to scuttle this government in a sea of crises, they are saying that openly."

Asaf Sharif, an aide to  Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, confirmed that Dor had decided to halt the shipments.

In the past, Israel paid the debt from tax revenues it collects for the Palestinian Authority. However, Sharif said Israel would not do so again.

"If this happens, there will be a humanitarian crisis", said Mujahid Salama, head of the Palestinian petrol commission.

Israel has frozen the $55 million in monthly tax transfers to the Palestinian Authority as part of its boycott of the new Hamas-led government which took power in March.

The money has been placed in escrow. Israel used some of the money last month to pay the fuel debt, preventing a fuel emergency.

Israel said, however, it would not oppose measures by the Middle East Quartet for peace – the United Nations, European Union, United States and Russia – to resume channelling aid to the Palestinians through a new mechanism that will bypass Hamas.

*this article was sourced from aljazeera.net and local sources