From the BBC:
“Biden
administration to restore $235m in US aid to Palestinians”
US President
Joe Biden's administration plans to provide $235m (£171m) of aid to
Palestinians, restoring part of the assistance cut by Donald Trump. Two-thirds
will go to the UN's agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa, which has suffered
a financial crisis since it lost $360m of US funding in 2018. Mr Biden wants to
"restore credible engagement" by the Palestinians in long-stalled
peace talks with Israel. Palestinian leaders accused Mr Trump of being heavily
biased towards Israel. They rejected a peace plan he unveiled last year that
envisaged recognising Israeli sovereignty over Jewish settlements in the
occupied West Bank and the Jordan Valley, and Jerusalem remaining Israel's
"undivided capital". Israel occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem
in the 1967 Middle East war. Most of the international community considers the
settlements illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.
Who will
receive the aid? Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US plans
included $75m in economic and development assistance in the West Bank and Gaza,
$10m for peacebuilding programmes through the US Agency for International
Development (USAid), and $150m in humanitarian assistance for the UN Relief and
Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (Unrwa). The US will also resume
security assistance programmes with the Palestinians. The funding is in
addition to the $15m in assistance to address the impact of the Covid-19
pandemic and food insecurity in the West Bank and Gaza that the US announced
last month. "US foreign assistance for the Palestinian people
serves important US interests and values," Mr Blinken said. "It
provides critical relief to those in great need, fosters economic development,
and supports Israeli-Palestinian understanding, security co-ordination and
stability. It also aligns with the values and interests of our allies and
partners. "The United States is committed to advancing prosperity,
security, and freedom for both Israelis and Palestinians in tangible ways in
the immediate term, which is important in its own right, but also as a means to
advance towards a negotiated two-state solution." Unrwa
Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini said the agency "could not be more
pleased that once again we will partner with the United States to provide
critical assistance to some of the most vulnerable refugees across the Middle
East". Israel's foreign ministry said its position was that Unrwa "in
its current form perpetuates the conflict and does not contribute to its
resolution". The renewal of US aid "should be accompanied by
substantial and necessary changes in the nature, goals and conduct of the
organisation", it added.
Analysis box
by Yolande Knell, Middle East correspondent This news has come as a huge
relief to Palestinians. Their economy is propped up by international donors and
was left reeling by the dramatic cuts of the Trump administration. Many
saw them as an attempt to push Palestinian leaders into peace talks with Israel
on terms that they considered to be heavily biased against them. At
Qalandia refugee camp in the occupied West Bank, Hassan Abu al-Eish, 85, said
he had felt the effect of the cuts in aid and was left unable to afford the
basics. "When Trump arrived, he stopped all the Unrwa funds and closed all
the doors on us," he commented. The hope now is that President
Biden will reverse other parts of the Trump administration's Middle East
policy. But steps to resurrect negotiations for a two-state solution
appear unlikely until the impact of Israel's latest inconclusive general
election becomes clearer and after Palestinian elections due in the coming
months.
What does
Unrwa do? The agency was originally set up to take care of hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians displaced by the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. It
says it now supports some 5.7 million registered refugees in Gaza, the West
Bank, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, including by providing them with healthcare,
education and social services. When Mr Trump took office the US was the
largest single donor to Unrwa. It provided $364m (£264m) in 2017 and funded
almost 30% of its operations. But in 2018, the Trump administration said
it was ending all support for Unrwa, calling it "irredeemably
flawed". The agency strongly rejected the accusation. Other donors
increased their contributions in response, but the budget that supports the
delivery of essential services was still left with a huge shortfall. Unrwa's
director of operations in the West Bank, Gwyn Lewis, told the BBC it had been
"a tough few years", with the agency forced to make reductions to its
programmes. It had to delay paying the salaries of its staff at the end of last
year because of the shortfall. "[The US announcement is] going to
reassure a lot of the community and our staff, but it doesn't mean that we're
on a financially safe ground as yet," she said. "And so we're really
hoping that this US support will be a signal for other countries to renew their
funding."
^ The UNRWA has
done little to nothing to change its organization or leadership and so the
corruption and controversaries will continue (only with more US money to do it
with.) Also, the US should not support Gaza as it continues to be governed by
the elected internationally-recognized terrorist group – Hamas. The West Bank
is another story. I can see restoring funding to them. I just hope Biden isn’t
just doing this because it is something that Trump opposed. Giving money (especially
unchecked money) to groups that support terrorists will only lead to violence
and death and more rockets fired into Israel. ^
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