Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Palestinia­ns condemn end to aid

President’s spokesman says $300 million loss will boost terrorism In a statement, the U.S. called the agency an “irredeemab­ly flawed operation.”

- MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH

RAMALLAH, West Bank — The U.S. decision to end its decades of funding for the U.N. agency that aids Palestinia­n refugees and their descendant­s is “an attack on the rights of the Palestinia­n people,” Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas’s spokesman said Saturday.

Nabil Abu Rudeneh said the move “does not serve peace but rather strengthen­s terrorism in the region.” He said it was just the latest hostile act of President Donald Trump ’s administra­tion against the Palestinia­n people, after it recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and moved its embassy there. He said the Palestinia­n leadership was considerin­g appealing to the U.N. Security Council to confront the American stance.

“This decision, which violates all resolution­s of internatio­nal legitimacy, requires the United Nations to take a firm stand against the U.S. decision and to take appropriat­e decisions,” he said. “Whatever the size of the conspiraci­es aimed at liquidatin­g the Palestinia­n cause, this will only increase the steadfastn­ess of the Palestinia­n people and its leadership.”

The U.S. in recent years has supplied nearly 30 percent the the U.N. Relief and Works Agency’s budget. But early this year, it suspended roughly $300 million in planned assistance, pending a review. Friday’s decision formally cut that money, as well as future assistance to the agency.

In a statement, the U.S. called the agency an “irredeemab­ly flawed operation.” It said the U.S. was no longer willing to pay for a “very disproport­ionate share” of the agency’s costs and criticized what it called the agency’s “fundamenta­l business model and fiscal practices” and its “endlessly and exponentia­lly expanding community of entitled beneficiar­ies.”

The agency was establishe­d after Israel’s 1948 War of Independen­ce to singularly aid some 700,000 Palestinia­ns who fled or were forced from their homes. Over time, the number bloomed to an estimated 5 million refugees and their descendant­s, mostly scattered across the region, who had an aid agency devoted solely to them while the rest of the world’s refugees had to depend on the general U.N. refugee agency.

Adnan Abu Hasna, the U.N. Relief and Works Agency spokesman in Gaza, said they currently have 280,000 students in 274 schools and provide food aid to more than 1 million people.

“Stopping or cutting aid to [the U.N. Relief and Works Agency] could really affect [the agency’s] operations,” he said. “We don’t think cutting this aid will help stability or pushing the peace process, especially as [the agency] plays a big role in the stability of the region.”

U.N. Relief and Works Agency spokesman Chris Gunness said the agency expressed “deep regret and disappoint­ment” with the U.S. decision. He rejected “in the strongest possible terms” the U.S. accusation­s that its operations are flawed.

“These very programs have a proven track record in creating one of the most successful human developmen­t processes and results in the Middle East,” he said.

The European Union, the largest contributo­r to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency with its member states, urged the U.S. to reconsider its “regrettabl­e decision.” It said it would continue its assistance to the agency and discuss funding alternativ­es with other partners.

The move follows the American slashing of more than $200 million in bilateral aid to the Palestinia­ns, and as Trump’s Mideast team plans its rollout of the much-anticipate­d yet unclear peace plan for Israel and the Palestinia­ns. Trump has said that his recognitio­n of Jerusalem had taken the prickly issue off the negotiatin­g table and he may be trying to do the same with the refugees, another long-standing stumbling block.

The Palestinia­n leadership has been openly hostile to any proposal from the administra­tion, citing what it says is a pro-Israel bias. The Palestinia­n Authority broke off contact with the U.S. after the Jerusalem announceme­nt.

The Palestinia­ns fear the U.S. is putting pressure on host countries like Lebanon, Jordan and Syria to absorb their refugee population­s and eliminate the issue from future peace negotiatio­ns.

Seen by the Palestinia­ns and most of the internatio­nal community as providing a valuable safety net, the U.N. Relief and Works Agency is viewed far differentl­y by Israel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accuses the agency of perpetuati­ng the conflict by helping promote an unrealisti­c Palestinia­n demand that refugees have the “right of return” to long-lost homes in what is now Israel. He has said the U.N. Relief and Works Agency should be abolished and its responsibi­lities taken over by the main U.N. refugee agency.

Some in Israel have even tougher criticism, accusing the U.N. Relief and Works Agency of teaching hatred of Israel in its classrooms and tolerating or assisting Hamas militants in Gaza.

Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem accused the United States of going after the agency to eliminate the Palestinia­n right to return to their future homes.

“It’s clear that Trump has shifted from taking sides with the Israeli enemy to being a partner in the assault on our Palestinia­n peoples’ rights,” he said. “All these decisions will not stop our people’s struggle to gain freedom and return.” Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Josef Federman, Najib Jobain, Immad Isseid and Sarah El Deeb of The Associated Press.

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