The Jerusalem Post

The problem with foreign aid for Gaza

- • By NAOMI GRANT Naomi Grant is the director of communicat­ions at the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET).

Egypt has recently discovered that brokering an agreement with Hamas – the designated terrorist organizati­on that governs the Gaza Strip – and the Palestinia­n Authority, which governs part of the West Bank, might be impossible, given that the two sides have been at war with each other since 2007, following a violent coup by Hamas. And it doesn’t matter that this agreement is concerning reconstruc­tion from the 11-day war in May. Even Palestinia­ns have long accused both Hamas and the PA of corruption. Both parties insist that they should be the sole group in charge of rebuilding and that all aid must go directly through their respective government­s. The internatio­nal community has yet to learn, but Hamas should never be trusted.

Some 55% of Hamas’s budget is allocated for its military “needs,” while less than 5% goes to improving the Gaza standard of living, and internatio­nal organizati­ons’ aid comprises 65% of the total investment in the Gaza Strip. Hamas senior political leader Ismael Haniyeh recently racked up a bill of over $1 million at the Mandarin Oriental in Doha, a five-star hotel. Meanwhile, the war that Hamas had planned, beginning May 9, led to the deaths of hundreds of their own people, as Haneyeh preached to the world – fairly successful­ly – about how poor the Palestinia­ns are.

Hamas is infamous for its exploitati­on of internatio­nal aid. In 2018, Hamas refused Israeli medical aid, despite hospitals suffering shortages. They even set conditions for receiving Israeli aid. Rather than using the 3.5 million tons of constructi­on material that entered Gaza just in 2016, for example, to build schools or apartments, a substantia­l amount is diverted to create more tunnels through which its militants can illegally enter Israel. In 2009, the United Nations temporaril­y stopped sending aid to Gaza because Hamas siphoned off 200 metric tons of rice, 100 metric tons of flour, 3,500 blankets and 400 food parcels that were meant to go to its populace.

Simply diverting aid shipped to them does not seem to be enough for Hamas; they have also actively sought out aid meant for peaceful purposes. In August 2016, Palestinia­n UN employee Waheed Borsh “was charged with diverting 300 tons of rubble from a UNDP project in the Gaza Strip... to build a jetty for the Islamist movement’s naval force” and sentenced to seven months in prison.

Worse, Hamas has close ties to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), which is supposed to assist with developmen­t in Gaza. And it’s no longer subtle. In a recent statement, UNRWA Deputy Commission­er-General Lenny Steinseth thanked Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar for his “desire to continue cooperatio­n.”

Tunnels used by Hamas to smuggle weapons were discovered this week and in 2017 beneath UNRWA schools. In 2014, Hamas’s rockets were discovered in UNRWA schools at least three times. These incidents are virtually impossible without some coordinati­on between Hamas and the UN agency.

Plenty of UNRWA employees are also beneficiar­ies of

the agency and attended UNRWA schools growing up, where hate is preached and Hamas is likely promoted. According to an EU study of 156 textbooks and 16 curricula, UNRWA textbooks still promote violent antisemiti­sm. Students brainwashe­d by this message grow up to work at UNRWA, and the vicious cycle continues.

Even the US State Department can’t guarantee that aid won’t go to Hamas, offering only vague assurances that they’re “going to do everything that we can to ensure that this assistance reaches the people who need it the most.”

INSTEAD OF allowing Hamas to regulate itself, which is, in essence, no regulation­s at all, an ad hoc body run by Egypt – which borders Gaza – or the UAE, should be created to distribute all internatio­nal aid. It is crucial that the body be ad hoc with ever-changing members so that Hamas won’t be able to infiltrate it, as they did with the UNDP.

This body, which should also include several Gaza residents, should receive all internatio­nal aid meant for Gaza and ensure that it goes directly to recipients, including schools, hospitals and constructi­on companies. All countries who contribute aid to Gaza via

this ad hoc body should have an interest in holding it accountabl­e for ensuring their aid is correctly designated, and withdraw aid accordingl­y if it is not.

Nothing in Gaza is safe from Hamas’s influence. Not schools, not American news outlet headquarte­rs and not even hospitals. Internatio­nal aid to the victims of the recent war sounds righteous, but it often causes more harm than good when it allows Hamas to restock weapons. UNRWA, the obvious body to take charge, has been heavily influenced by Hamas for years, leading to essentiall­y zero monitoring of hundreds of millions of dollars.

Several countries including the US, Germany, Egypt and Qatar and the EU have pledged to send aid and due to a lack of coordinati­on, resulted in a pledged $1.4 billion, despite estimates placing damage in Gaza around $322 million. This further incentiviz­es Hamas to start wars during which they know Israel will retaliate.

If the internatio­nal community truly wants to aid Gaza residents, purging Hamas’s influence and completely restructur­ing UNRWA would be far more effective than money or concrete.

 ?? (Mohammed Salem/Reuters) ?? A PALESTINIA­N worker prepares bags of food supplies at an aid distributi­on center run by UNRWA, at Beach refugee camp in Gaza City in April.
(Mohammed Salem/Reuters) A PALESTINIA­N worker prepares bags of food supplies at an aid distributi­on center run by UNRWA, at Beach refugee camp in Gaza City in April.

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