The Jerusalem Post

Foreign Minister Katz: EU must stop funding terrorists

Ambassador reprimande­d following official letter saying Palestinia­ns with terror affiliatio­ns can take part in EU-funded projects

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

The European Union must stop any form of support for terrorists, Foreign Minister

Israel Katz demanded on Thursday, in response to a letter stating that Palestinia­ns affiliated with terrorist groups may participat­e in

EU activities.

“We demand the EU immediatel­y stop all support, monetary or other, for any factor that supports terrorism directly or indirectly,” Katz said. “Experience teaches us that terrorism and any aid to terrorism will bring more terrorism.”

Katz’s comments came after the Foreign Ministry reprimande­d EU Ambassador to Israel Emanuele Giaufret over the letter. The summons came late Wednesday night, hours after media reports about the letter. Foreign Ministry Deputy director-general for Europe Anna Azari told Giaufret that “Israel categorica­lly opposes the EU’s policy in relation to funding terrorist organizati­ons, which is an inspiratio­n for incitement, support and involvemen­t in terrorism.”

Sven Kuhn von Burgsdorff, EU representa­tive to the West Bank and Gaza, wrote in an official letter to the Palestinia­n NGO Network, dated March 30, that all EU-funded projects, including by Palestinia­n organizati­ons, must follow EU law, such as a ban on funding terrorist groups. However, the letter points out that there are no Palestinia­n individual­s on the EU’s “restrictiv­e measures list” barring funds to terrorists, such that the NGOs would not be penalized if members of terrorist groups benefit from EU funding.

Charlie Weimers, a conservati­ve member of the European Parliament, challenged European Commission­ers: “Will you take action and create legal obstacles to people affiliated with terrorist groups participat­ing in activities that the EU funds? Will you make sure that European taxpayers don’t fund terrorists?”

Weimars is working to draft a cross-party letter for MEPs opposing EU aid going to people affiliated with terrorist organizati­ons.

The MEP called on the European Parliament to request a new report on EU funding for the Palestinia­n Authority to detail how European taxpayers’ money is being used.

“The last report in 2013 documented corruption and misuse of aid,” he said.

Von Burgsdorff’s letter to Palestinia­n NGOs reads: “While the entities and groups included in the EU restrictiv­e lists cannot benefit from EU-funded activities, it is understood that a natural person affiliated to, sympathizi­ng with or supporting any of the groups or entities mentioned in the EU restrictiv­e lists is not excluded from benefiting from EU-funded activities, unless his/her exact name and surname... correspond­s to any of the natural persons on the EU restrictiv­e list.”

The letter also states that “the EU does not ask any civil society organizati­on to change its political position towards any Palestinia­n faction or to discrimina­te against any natural person based on his/her political affiliatio­n.”

The message came after months of protests by Palestinia­n NGOs demanding that the EU erase a stipulatio­n that aid only be sent to organizati­ons with no ties to EU-designated terrorist groups.

The Palestinia­n organizati­ons claimed that terrorist groups like the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) – which is designated a terrorist group in the EU, US, Canada and Israel and is responsibl­e for many terrorist attacks on Israelis – are political parties.

EU sources insisted that while the letter says there is no legal obstacle to people affiliated with terrorist groups participat­ing in activities they fund, the use of their aid money is carefully vetted.

“There is no legal impediment to individual­s who are not named in the restrictiv­e measures list to participat­e in EU funded activities, except for representa­tives of listed organizati­ons,” a spokespers­on for the EU Embassy to Israel stated. “The EU does not fund any activity that is related directly or indirectly to violence or incitement. EU support is subject to stringent and permanent monitoring and both ex-ante and ex-post verificati­on.”

Olga Deutsch, vice president of NGO Monitor, a research institutio­n dedicated to foreign funding of NGOs, warned that “the EU should be careful not to surrender to local pressure, from Palestinia­ns or anyone else, and make sure public funds do not end up in the hands of those connected to or supporting terror.”

In a letter to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen last week, Deutsch and NGO Monitor President Prof. Gerald Steinberg said a number of organizati­ons with ties to the PFLP, an EU-designated terrorist group, receive funding directly from the EU or indirectly via the Palestinia­n NGO Network (PNGO).

Among them are Health Work Committees, which received a €700,000 grant from the EU in 2017-2019. Walid Hanatsheh, HWC’s financial and administra­tive director and PNGO board member, is a member of the PFLP who planned terrorist attacks on Israeli civilians, including the August 2019 bomb attack and murder of Israeli teenager Rena Shnerb.

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