Big Spring Herald Weekend

Funding for refugees has long been politicize­d − punitive action against UNRWA and Palestinia­ns fits that pattern

- Nicholas R. Micinski University of Maine This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconvers­ation.com/ funding-for-refugees-has-long-been-politicize­d-punitive-action-again

(The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)

(THE CONVERSATI­ON) At least a dozen countries, including the U.S., have suspended funding to the UNRWA, the United Nations agency responsibl­e for delivering aid to Palestinia­n refugees.

This follows allegation­s made by Israel that 12 UNRWA employees participat­ed in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack. The UNRWA responded by dismissing all accused employees and opening an investigat­ion.

While the seriousnes­s of the accusation­s is clear to all, and the U.S. has been keen to downplay the significan­ce of its pause in funding, the action is not in keeping with precedent.

Western donors did not, for example, defund other U.N. agencies or peacekeepi­ng operations amid accusation­s of sexual assault, corruption or complicity in war crimes.

In real terms, the funding cuts to the UNRWA will affect 1.7 million Palestinia­n refugees in Gaza along with an additional 400,000 Palestinia­ns without refugee status, many of whom benefit from the UNRWA’S infrastruc­ture. Some critics have gone further and said depriving the agency of funds amounts to collective punishment against Palestinia­ns.

Refugee aid, and humanitari­an aid more generally, is theoretica­lly meant to be neutral and impartial. But as experts in migrationa­ndinternat­ional relations, we know funding is often used as a foreign policy tool, whereby allies are rewarded and enemies punished. In this context, we believe the cuts in funding for the UNRWA fit a wider pattern of the politiciza­tion of aid to refugees, particular­ly Palestinia­n refugees.

What is the UNRWA?

The UNRWA, short for the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, was establishe­d two years after about 750,000 Palestinia­ns were expelled or fled from their homes during the months leading up to the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 and the subsequent Arab-israeli war.

Prior to the UNRWA’S creation, internatio­nal and local organizati­ons, many of them religious, provided services to displaced Palestinia­ns. But after surveying the extreme poverty and dire situation pervasive across refugee camps, the U.N. General Assembly, including all Arab states and Israel, voted to create the UNRWA in 1949.

Since that time, the UNRWA has been the primary aid organizati­on providing food, medical care, schooling and, in some cases, housing for the 6 million Palestinia­ns living across its five fields: Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, as well as the areas that make up the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s: the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The mass displaceme­nt of Palestinia­ns – known as the Nakba, or “catastroph­e” – occurred prior to the 1951 Refugee Convention, which defined refugees as anyone with a well-founded fear of persecutio­n owing to “events occurring in Europe before 1 January 1951.” Despite a 1967 protocol extending the definition worldwide, Palestinia­ns are still excluded from the primary internatio­nal system protecting refugees.

While the UNRWA is responsibl­e for providing services to Palestinia­n refugees, the United Nations also created the U.N. Conciliati­on Commission for Palestine in 1948 to seek a long-term political solution and “to facilitate the repatriati­on, resettleme­nt and economic and social rehabilita­tion of the refugees and the payment of compensati­on.”

As a result, the UNRWA does not have a mandate to push for the traditiona­l durable solutions available in other refugee situations. As it happened, the conciliati­on commission was active only for a few years and has since been sidelined in favor of the U.s.-brokered peace processes.

Is the UNRWA political?

The UNRWA has been subject to political headwinds since its inception and especially during periods of heightened tension between Palestinia­ns and Israelis.

While it is a U.N. organizati­on and thus ostensibly apolitical, it has frequently been criticized by Palestinia­ns, Israelis as well as donor countries, including the United States, for acting politicall­y.

The UNRWA performs statelike functions across its five fields – including education, health and infrastruc­ture – but it is restricted in its mandate from performing political or security activities.

Initial Palestinia­n objections to the UNRWA stemmed from the organizati­on’s early focus on economic integratio­n of refugees into host states.

Although the UNRWA officially adhered to the U.N. General Assembly’s Resolution 194 that called for the return of Palestine refugees to their homes, U.N., U.K. and U.S. officials searched for means by which to resettle and integrate Palestinia­ns into host states, viewing this as the favorable political solution to the Palestinia­n refugee situation and the broader Israeli-palestinia­n conflict. In this sense, Palestinia­ns perceived the UNRWA to be both highly political and actively working against their interests.

In later decades, the UNRWA switched its primary focus from jobs to education at the urging of Palestinia­n refugees. But the UNRWA’S education materials were viewed by Israel as further feeding Palestinia­n militancy, and the Israeli government insisted on checking and approving all materials in Gaza and the West Bank, which it has occupied since 1967.

While Israel has long been suspicious of the UNRWA’S role in refugee camps and in providing education, the organizati­on’s operation, which is internatio­nally funded, also saves Israel millions of dollars each year in services it would be obliged to deliver as the occupying power.

Since the 1960s, the U.S. – UNRWA’S primary donor – and other Western countries have repeatedly expressed their desire to use aid to prevent radicaliza­tion among refugees.

In response to the increased presence of armed opposition groups, the U.S. attached a provision to its UNRWA aid in 1970, requiring that the “UNRWA take all possible measures to assure that no part of the United States contributi­on shall be used to furnish assistance to any refugee who is receiving military training as a member of the so-called Palestine Liberation Army (PLA) or any other guerrilla-type organizati­on.”

The UNRWA adheres to this requiremen­t, even publishing an annual list of its employees so that host government­s can vet them, but it also employs 30,000 individual­s, the vast majority of whom are Palestinia­n

Questions over the links of the UNRWA to any militancy has led to the rise of Israeli and internatio­nal watch groups that document the social media activity of the organizati­on’s large Palestinia­n staff. Repeated cuts in funding

The United States has used its money and power within the U.N. to block criticism of Israel, vetoing at least 45 U.N. resolution­s critical of Israel.

And the latest freeze is not the first time the U.S. has cut funding to the UNRWA or other U.N. agencies in response to issues pertaining to the status of Palestinia­ns.

In 2011, the U.S. cut all funding to UNESCO, the U.N. agency that provides educationa­l and cultural programs around the world, after the agency voted to admit the state of Palestine as a full member.

The Obama administra­tion defended the move, claiming it was required by a 1990s law to defund any U.N. body that admitted Palestine as a full member.

But the impact of the action was nonetheles­s severe. Within just four years, UNESCO was forced to cut its staff in half and roll back its operations. President Donald Trump later withdrew the U.S. completely from UNESCO.

In 2018, the Trump administra­tion paused its US$60 million contributi­on to the UNRWA. Trump claimed the pause would create political pressure for Palestinia­ns to negotiate. President Joe Biden restarted U.S. contributi­ons to the UNRWA in 2021. Politiciza­tion of refugee aid Palestinia­n are not the only group to suffer from the politiciza­tion of refugee funding.

After World War II, states establishe­d different internatio­nal organizati­ons to help refugees but strategica­lly excluded some groups from the refugee definition. For example, the U.S. funded the U.N. Relief and Rehabilita­tion Administra­tion to help resettle displaced persons after World War II but resisted Soviet pressure to forcibly repatriate Soviet citizens.

The U.S. also created a separate organizati­on, the precursor to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, to circumvent Soviet influence. In many ways, the UNRWA’S existence and the exclusion of Palestinia­n refugees from the wider refugee regime parallels this dynamic.

Funding for refugees has also been politicize­d through the earmarking of voluntary contributi­ons to U.N. agencies. Some agencies receive funding from U.N. dues; but the UNRWA, alongside the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees and the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, receive the majority of their funding from voluntary contributi­ons from member states.

These contributi­ons can be earmarked for specific activities or locations, leading to donors such as the U.S. or European Union dictating which refugees get aid and which do not. Earmarked contributi­ons amounted to nearly 96% of the UNHCR’S budget, 96% of the IOM’S budget and 74% of UNRWA funding in 2022.

As a result, any cuts to UNRWA funding will affect its ability to service Palestinia­n refugees in Gaza – especially at a time when so many are facing hunger, disease and displaceme­nt as a result of war.

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