Times Colonist

Canada resumes funding UN help for Gaza

- MIA RABSON

Canada has decided to resume funding to the controvers­ial United Nations agency that provides aid to Palestinia­n refugees in the Gaza Strip, Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Ahmed Hussen said Friday.

The decision comes seven weeks after Canada and 15 other countries temporaril­y halted payments to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East after Israel alleged in January that a dozen of its workers participat­ed in the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas.

The Canadian government’s next $25-million payment to the agency, known as UNRWA, is due next month. Ottawa did not miss a payment as a result of the pause.

Canada made the decision to go ahead with the payment after seeing an interim report from the UN, Hussen said, and with the knowledge that the urgent need for aid in Gaza is growing more dire by the day.

“UNRWA forms the backbone of the humanitari­an response in Gaza and in the region,” he said. Other aid agencies rely on UNRWA’s networks to help get aid to where it is needed most, he added.

Getting humanitari­an aid to the millions of Palestinia­ns living in desperate conditions has been an ongoing crisis, and aid groups warn of mass starvation if that does not change soon.

Hussen was in Egypt in February and visited the Rafah border crossing where he said trucks full of aid supplies had been sitting for weeks, unable to get in.

Canadians need to have confidence in the organizati­ons the government supports, Hussen said, but he offered no detail on what has been done to restore that confidence.

Israel has long accused UNRWA of being a “haven for Hamas’s radical ideology” and using its medical and education programs to incite antisemiti­sm. UNRWA officials say they have been provided no evidence to back up those claims.

Its website says it has investigat­ed claims against 66 of its 30,000 employees in Gaza and elsewhere, including for ties to Hamas.

UNRWA did fire all 12 of the accused employees named by Israel. It also says it screens all of its employees twice a year against the UN Security Council Consolidat­ed Sanctions List.

Hussen’s announceme­nt was first expected Wednesday, but a scheduled news conference was abruptly cancelled without explanatio­n amid media reports that UNRWA funding was about to resume.

The government later denied that report, saying it hadn’t reached a final decision.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau would not commit to the restoratio­n when asked about it Thursday and Hussen would not explain the delay.

UNRWA is the primary provider of social and humanitari­an assistance in the territory, including health care and education. It relies almost exclusivel­y on donations from UN member countries. Twelve of its 15 biggest donors, including Canada, hit the pause button after the allegation­s emerged.

Philippe Lazzarini, UNRWA’s commission­er general, pleaded for the restoratio­n of all funding earlier this week, warning UN delegates of the dire consequenc­es if it doesn’t happen.

The pro-Palestinia­n advocacy group Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East expressed relief at Canada’s decision Friday and urged the government to do more, quickly. “This reversal must be accompanie­d by a major infusion of additional aid to UNRWA,” the group said in a statement.

Canada has provided $100 million in aid for Gaza since the Israel-Hamas war began, including $40 million in new aid to multiple agencies — including the World Food Program and UNICEF — in the week after the UNRWA pause. Canada is also working to send aid via airdrops, including $100,000 for the Jordan Hashemite Charity Organizati­on, Hussen said. Canada is also providing cargo parachutes to help with critical airdrops.

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