Ottawa Citizen

THE EVIDENCE THAT ISRAEL SAYS LINKS UNRWA TO HAMAS

- BRYAN PASSIFIUME National Post bpassifium­e@postmedia.com

SUCH AN INTERPRETA­TION WOULD FORCE TRANSGENDE­R, NON-BINARY PEOPLE ... TO CHOOSE BETWEEN HAVING A SURGERY THEY DO NOT WANT AND WHICH DOES NOT ALIGN WITH THEIR GENDER EXPRESSION ... AND NOT HAVING GENDER-AFFIRMING SURGERY AT ALL. — JUSTICE BREESE DAVIES

Biographie­s of UN employees who took part in the Oct. 7 massacre in Israel. Satellite photos of Gaza schools constructe­d atop buried terrorist bunkers.

Hamas rocket launchers installed within metres of marked United Nations compounds.

This is just a portion of the Israeli intelligen­ce that Canada had access to when the Liberal government decided on March 8 to resume funding the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). Global Affairs Canada announced the decision despite several other countries, including the United States, opting to waiting until the conclusion of a UN investigat­ion before making any decisions on resuming funding they had also paused after allegation­s from Israel of links between UNRWA and the Oct. 7 terror attacks.

National Post was granted exclusive media access to the intelligen­ce given to the Trudeau government — a dossier spelling out Israel's case for Canada to permanentl­y stop sending tax dollars to the controvers­ial UN agency.

After allegation­s in January of UNRWA members taking active roles in the Oct. 7 massacre, the United States announced a temporary funding halt.

Canada and numerous other nations followed suit, but Ottawa reversed course two months later, in time to deliver this year's $25-million instalment of a $100-million funding pledge to UNRWA made last year by the Trudeau Liberals.

In contrast, the massive appropriat­ions package passed by the U.S. Congress late last month included a statutory ban on funding UNRWA until March 2025.

Japan, Australia, Finland and Sweden have also resumed their funding.

According to the intelligen­ce — which Israeli diplomatic officials confirmed to the Post was made available to the Canadian government before March 8 — Hamas views UNRWA as a pillar of its civil rule providing the support that allows it to put greater focus on its military and terrorism programs.

“Hamas is deeply and systematic­ally embedded in UNRWA,” the briefing states.

“Hamas members serve in all sectors of UNRWA activities, including in key positions.”

That's a conclusion shared by many Israeli politician­s and stakeholde­rs.

Iddo Moed, Israel's ambassador to Canada, questioned why funding was resumed given the abundance of evidence connecting UNRWA with a group officially classified as a terrorist group.

“We are not convinced that Canada used the informatio­n that we provided in a way that would put UNRWA in a different light than before. It's as if nothing happened,” he said. “Even if we got the message that Canada believes UNRWA needs to be reformed, our conviction is that UNRWA needs to be reformed immediatel­y and completely. As an organizati­on, it's become a bottleneck that's part of the problem, not the solution.”

UNRWA'S supporters insist it is a necessary welfare agency in Gaza and the West Bank. The UN has treated Palestinia­ns as refugees since Israel was establishe­d 76 years ago. But many Israelis see funding for UNRWA from countries like Canada as facilitati­ng further attacks against Israel.

“For years I've had meetings in western capitals, I've been to Ottawa and met with Canadian officials in Israel many times, and I tell them, `You get to feel very good about yourself, even very smug for giving money to supposedly the poor Palestinia­ns, but what you're really funding is the continuati­on and perpetuati­on of the century-long Palestinia­n war against the Jewish state,” said Einat Wilf, an Israeli politician and former Knesset member, in a previous conversati­on with this newspaper.

The Israeli UNRWA dossier suggests that as many as 2,135 UNRWA employees are members of Palestinia­n terror organizati­ons — more than three-quarters of them belonging to Hamas.

Of those, 327 are in the Alqassam Brigades — Hamas's military wing.

The dossier also contains over a dozen biographie­s of UNRWA employees who allegedly participat­ed in the Oct. 7 attack that killed about 1,200 people in Israel.

They include Faisal Ali Mussallem Al-naimi, an UNRWA social worker captured on surveillan­ce video removing the body of Yonatan Samerano from Kibbutz Beeri.

Hafez Mousa Mousa, a 42-year-old UNRWA school principal, allegedly moonlights in Hamas's Al-qassam Brigades.

Israel's intelligen­ce alleges he closed his school shortly before the attacks on Oct. 7 and notified fellow Hamas operatives to muster near the Gaza border.

Eighteen UNRWA school principals in Gaza are identified by Israel as alleged combat militants for Hamas.

Israeli officials said that while Hamas's influence over UNRWA was common knowledge, it wasn't until the Oct. 7 attacks that the full scale of the infiltrati­on came to light.

“While we gathered intelligen­ce on Hamas, more and more links to UNRWA came up,” a senior Israeli diplomatic source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told the National Post.

“The problem is that Hamas infiltrate­d into the ranks of UNRWA in a systematic manner, in a way that Hamas perceived UNRWA as a strategic asset.”

He said that UNRWA'S assertions that militant employees are merely a few bad apples don't hold water.

“If UNRWA will not recognize that there is a problem, it will be impossible to fix it,” the source said.

“Because the infiltrati­on is so wide, we believe it is beyond repair, and we don't want to see the continuati­on of the activity of UNRWA in the Gaza Strip.”

To fill the gap, the source said Israel has been providing Gaza with humanitari­an aid, but much of that is still being intercepte­d and seized by Hamas.

“Not all of the humanitari­an aid reached the civilians, Hamas was trying to use this aid for its own purposes,” he said.

Hamas is known for using civilians as human shields in Gaza, placing rocket launchers, command posts and other strategic targets among and even inside schools, mosques and hospitals.

Israeli intelligen­ce has uncovered at least 32 UNRWA facilities within 20 metres of Hamas installati­ons in Gaza.

A tunnel underneath the UNRWA-RUN Maghazi Prep School B in central Gaza was discovered in 2017, while the bunker beneath the UNRWA-RUN Zaitoun Prep School B was found in 2022.

The principals of both schools — Khaled Said el Masri and Mohammed Shuwaideh — also moonlight as Hamas militants, Israel alleges.

Despite UNRWA'S condemnati­on and promises to fill the tunnels, Israel maintains they're still in use.

Maps show arms warehouses, tunnel access points and logistical centres placed adjacent to Un-run schools, residences and facilities throughout the Gaza Strip.

One satellite image depicted constructi­on of an undergroun­d bunker in 2010, with an updated image from last year showing an UNRWA school built overtop.

Another near Rafah showed Hamas rocket launchers just metres from a mosque and schools, and throughout nearby UN refugee camps.

Yet another outlined Hamas's intelligen­ce headquarte­rs and a computer server farm underneath UNRWA'S Gaza headquarte­rs.

Hamas officials speak openly about the importance of their tunnels and undergroun­d bunkers in their war against Israel.

Mousa Abu Marzouk, deputy chair of the Hamas Political Bureau, told Russia Today in October that the Gaza tunnel system was designed to protect fighters and their infrastruc­ture from Israeli counteratt­acks.

“We have built the tunnels because we have no other way of protecting ourselves from being targeted and killed,” Marzouk said when asked why Hamas didn't also invest in bomb shelters for Gazan civilians.

 ?? AMIR LEVY / GETTY IMAGES ?? Activists in Jerusalem protest against UNRWA on March 20. The United Nations agency for Palestinia­n refugees has claimed some of its employees in Israeli detention were coerced into stating that staff took part in the Oct. 7 massacre.
AMIR LEVY / GETTY IMAGES Activists in Jerusalem protest against UNRWA on March 20. The United Nations agency for Palestinia­n refugees has claimed some of its employees in Israeli detention were coerced into stating that staff took part in the Oct. 7 massacre.

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