Arab News

Keeping UNRWA alive is a must

- OSAMA AL SHARIF | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS

Defunding the Palestine refugee agency now will threaten Israeli security, especially in the beleaguere­d Gaza Strip, create chaos in the Occupied Territorie­s, bring down the Palestinia­n Authority and enrage host countries.

THERE is little doubt that the decision by the US to withhold or delay payment to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is more than an impulsive reaction against the Palestinia­n leadership in the wake of the political storm caused by the American proclamati­on on Jerusalem last month. The US is the largest single nation contributo­r to the 70-year-old agency’s annual budget, and its recent resolution to suspend a cash payment of $125 million, due on Jan. 1, will have catastroph­ic repercussi­ons for the cash-strapped UN body.

In fact, one can only deduce that the threat to cut off financial support to an organizati­on that is responsibl­e for about five million registered Palestinia­n refugees and their descendant­s has little to do with forcing President Mahmoud Abbas to re-engage in non-existent peace talks with Israel. It is a deliberate and sober move to defund UNRWA or, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put it, to make it “pass away from the world.” And, just as the toughest part of the negotiatio­ns, Jerusalem, was taken off the table, the dismantlin­g of UNRWA will remove another complex final-status issue: That of the Palestinia­n refugees and the right of return. It is part of a scheme to dismantle and bury the Palestine question.

But, despite Netanyahu’s cautious support of the US move and warnings emanating from his own Cabinet members and security officials, doing away with UNRWA at this stage would be catastroph­ic for all. The UN agency was formed by the General Assembly — with Israel’s backing — in 1949, following the first Arab-Israeli war. Its mandate, which is different from that of the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR), is renewed by the same body every three years and it is responsibl­e for Palestinia­n refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. While, like the UNHCR, it allows refugee status to be inherited by descendant­s, it does not seek to end that status through local integratio­n in host countries or resettleme­nt in a third country.

Netanyahu and his predecesso­rs claim that allowing the right of return will lead to the eliminatio­n of the state of Israel. He wants the UNHCR to take over UNRWA’s responsibi­lities, thus paving the way for settling Palestinia­n refugees in host countries — an explosive issue, especially for Jordan and Lebanon. Since the Oslo process was launched in the 1990s, Palestinia­n and Israeli interlocut­ors had explored ways of symbolical­ly implementi­ng the right of return, opting for financial compensati­on instead of the repatriati­on of Palestinia­n refugees into the nascent Palestinia­n state. It is a complex issue that will not be resolved through unilateral steps by either Israel or the US.

In fact, the refugee challenge underlines the need for a credible and just political process that requires internatio­nal support and regional cooperatio­n. Attempting to take the problem off the negotiatio­n table, as Netanyahu and his farright coalition partners would like, is not only simplistic and naive, but dangerous in its regional repercussi­ons.

One cannot help but assert that the US is being both reckless and sloppy in implementi­ng a Netanyahu agenda, whose ultimate goal is to shut down the Palestinia­n cause altogether. If we are to believe what Michael Wolff has unveiled in his recent book “Fire and Fury,” the so-called “ultimate deal” in the Middle East gives the Palestinia­ns absolutely nothing in terms of an independen­t state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. This is exactly the position of Netanyahu, whose Likud Party has just voted to impose Israeli law on Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank, virtually annexing most of the Occupied Territorie­s.

Defunding UNRWA now will threaten Israeli security, especially in the beleaguere­d Gaza Strip, create chaos in the Occupied Territorie­s, bring down the Palestinia­n Authority and enrage host countries. And, just as with the Jerusalem issue, it will bring to the front the plight of the Palestinia­n people. It will not succeed in blackmaili­ng the Palestinia­n leadership, but will allow extremists to press their case — that a negotiated settlement is impossible and that armed resistance is the only way forward. It will prove what moderate leaders have always said: That, unless the Palestinia­n issue is resolved justly, the region will continue to be unsettled.

This is why the internatio­nal community, including Arab and Muslim countries, must step in to neutralize the UNRWA card. The US’s annual share of the agency’s budget is almost half a billion dollars — a sum that pales in comparison when one thinks of the geopolitic­al damage that would result from UNRWA’s collapse. Keeping the agency alive is a must, while resolving the Palestinia­n issue has never been so urgent and cost-effective for the entire world.

Osama Al Sharif is a journalist and political commentato­r based in Amman. Twitter: @plato010

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