The Guardian (USA)

Biden restores $200m in US aid to Palestinia­ns slashed by Trump

- Oliver Holmes in Jerusalem

The US will restore more than $200m (£145m) in aid to Palestinia­ns, reversing massive funding cuts under the Trump administra­tion that left humanitari­an groups scrambling to keep people from plunging into poverty.

“[We] plan to restart US economic, developmen­t, and humanitari­an assistance for the Palestinia­n people,” the secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said in a statement.

The aid includes $75m in economic and developmen­t funds for the occupied West Bank and Gaza, which will provide food and clean water to Palestinia­ns and help small businesses. A further $150m will be provided to the United Nations relief and works agency for Palestine refugees in the near east (UNRWA), a UN body that supports more than 5 million Palestinia­n refugees across the region.

After Donald Trump’s row with the Palestinia­n leadership, President Joe Biden has sought to restart Washington’s flailing efforts to push for a two-state resolution for the IsraelPale­stinian crisis, and restoring the aid is part of that. In his statement, Blinken said US foreign assistance “serves important US interests and values”.

“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,” he said.

Palestinia­n leaders and the UN welcomed the resumption of aid. Israel, however, criticised the decision to restore funds to UNRWA, a body it has long claimed is a bloated, flawed group.

“We believe that this UN agency for so-called refugees should not exist in its current format,” said Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan. Pro-Israel US lawmakers joined the country in opposition to the aid and said they would scrutinise it in Congress.

From 2018, Trump gradually cut virtually all US money to Palestinia­n aid projects after the Palestinia­n leadership accused him of being biased towards Israel and refused to talk. The US president accused Palestinia­ns of lacking “appreciati­on or respect”.

The former president cancelled more than $200m in economic aid, including $25m earmarked for underfunde­d East Jerusalem hospitals that have suffered during the Covid-19 crisis. Trump’s cuts to UNRWA, which also serves Palestinia­n refugees in warstricke­n Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East, was described by the agency’s then head as “the biggest and most severe” funding crisis since the body was created in 1949. The US was previously UNRWA’s biggest donor.

To outcry from aid workers, leaked emails suggested the move may have partly been a political tactic to weaken the Palestinia­n leadership. Those emails alleged that Trump’s sonin-law and adviser Jared Kushner had argued that “ending the assistance outright could strengthen his negotiatin­g hand” to push Palestinia­ns to accept their blueprint for an Israeli-Palestinia­n

deal.

The cuts were decried as catastroph­ic for Palestinia­ns’ ability to provide basic healthcare, schooling and sanitation, including by prominent Israeli establishm­ent figures.

Last April, as the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, Trump’s government announced it would send money to Palestinia­ns. The $5m one-off donation was roughly 1% of the amount Washington provided a year before Trump began slashing aid.

 ??  ?? A Palestinia­n aid worker prepares food supplies at a UNRWA distributi­on centre in Gaza. Photograph: Mohammed Salem/Reuters
A Palestinia­n aid worker prepares food supplies at a UNRWA distributi­on centre in Gaza. Photograph: Mohammed Salem/Reuters

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