Kuwait Times

UN agency on Palestinia­n refugees on tenterhook­s

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BRUSSELS: The UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees is waiting anxiously on the outcome this month of a probe into alleged mismanagem­ent that has dented its already severely depleted funding, one of its top officials said yesterday. The UN Relief and Works Agency hopes the results of the investigat­ion will enable it to get past the scandal that has worsened a cash crunch threatenin­g the school and health services it provides to five million Palestinia­ns.

UNRWA’s director for West Bank operations Gwyn Lewis told AFP in Brussels: “We’re waiting with bated breath because it obviously has financial implicatio­ns.” She said the conclusion­s of the probe are expected to be delivered “around the end of October” to UN chief Antonio Guterres, who would then issue public and internal “follow-up steps”. The timing is crucial as the agency’s threeyear mandate is up for renewal this month, and money is tight.

UNRWA has been skating on very thin financial ice since last year, after US President Donald Trump decided to suspend, then yank entirely his country’s contributi­on to the agency’s budget, robbing it of its top donor. Those woes were compounded

by the allegation­s of abuse by the agency’s management, leading other key donors — the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d — to snap shut their purses. That has left the agency struggling to provide the schooling, medical and sanitary programs it runs for Palestinia­n refugees in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, the West Bank and Gaza. According to a copy of an internal UN report obtained by AFP in July, senior management at UNRWA engaged in “sexual misconduct, nepotism, retaliatio­n, discrimina­tion and other abuses of authority, for personal gain”.

Lewis did not confirm those allegation­s, noting only “rumors” and leaks to the media. “None of us have actually seen it,” she said of the report, adding: “Our sense is that it’s not about financial misappropr­iation or corruption, it’s linked to management and human resources issues.” She did note that the agency’s deputy chief, Sandra Mitchell, had been replaced in August by an acting deputy commission­er-general tasked with strengthen­ing human resources and financial oversight.

Lewis said she was in Brussels for two days of meetings with European Commission officials to shore up UNRWA’s mandate renewal and, importantl­y, to maintain funding. Despite program cutbacks, the agency faces an $89 million (80-million-euro) shortfall for the rest of this year, she said, and “financial uncertaint­y” beyond that. UNRWA’s budget for this year is $1.2 billion, with around 90 percent of that being linked to paying for the 30,000 staff it employees, most of them teachers, doctors and nurses. — AFP

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