Otago Daily Times

Cuts ‘catastroph­ic’

Palestinia­n refugees fear for the future after the United States pulls funding, reports Heba Kanso, of the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

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THE United Nations agency that funds schools for Palestinia­n refugee communitie­s has said it may run out of money to keep them going by the end of this month after the United States — its biggest donor — halted its funding. Other services and financial support for vulnerable Palestinia­ns could be severely affected as well.

LIKE children across the northern hemisphere, young Palestinia­n refugees went back to school last week after their summer break. How long they will be able to stay is an open question.

The United Nations agency that funds schools for Palestinia­n refugee communitie­s has said it may run out of money to keep them going by the end of this month after the United States — its biggest donor — halted its funding.

The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) provides services to about 5 million Palestinia­n refugees across Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the West Bank and Gaza — among them Ziad Shtewi, a 63yearold father of 10 who lives in a camp in north Lebanon.

‘‘Many Palestinia­n refugees can’t find work, or get paid little. How will we educate our kids?’’ said Shtewi, who has has two children at UNRWA schools.

‘‘These kids will be in the streets. It will be a generation of uneducated kids. It would be a horrible life. Education is critical for their future.’’

UNRWA runs 66 free schools across Lebanon, which it says is home to nearly half a million registered Palestinia­n refugees, most of them descendant­s of those who were driven from their homes or fled the 1948 war that led to Israel’s creation.

Shtewi said the impact of the funding cuts would be ‘‘catastroph­ic’’ for the community — a view echoed by fellow refugee Fuad Ashool.

‘‘We have our hands on our hearts and are really afraid of the future. I am worried about where my kids are going to go,’’ said the 53yearold father of four, who like Shtewi lives in the Nahr alBared camp.

Ashool used to paint apartments, but can no longer work because of back pain. He said he feared losing UNRWA’s financial assistance, and worried for Palestinia­ns who were even worse off.

‘‘Our people will have to become beggars,’’ he said.

‘‘We are a group of people that want to go back to our homeland, and in Lebanon we are thankful for being here, but this stress that we are living in is so uncertain and difficult,’’ Ashool said.

UNRWA has said it faces a shortfall of more than $US200 million ($NZ304.3 million) after the US slashed funding earlier this year, having promised $365 million for the whole year.

Washington said the agency needed to make unspecifie­d reforms and called on the Palestinia­ns to renew peace talks with Israel.

UNRWArun schools in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip got under way last week.

‘‘All eyes are on the end of September when, if things continue as they are, we will not have enough money to keep our schools open,’’ spokesman Chris Gunness said.

‘‘Palestine refugees see an UNRWA education as a passport to dignity and if they lose that, they lose their future. If UNRWA services close down, the situation of a deeply marginalis­ed community will get significan­tly worse.’’

Barred from taking up most jobs in Lebanon, the refugees depend on UNRWA for basic services. Many live in overcrowde­d camps with frequent electricit­y and water cuts.

For Lora, who relies on UNRWA for the blood pressure medication she needs, it is a question of survival.

‘‘Without UNRWA we can’t live. It will be devastatin­g for our people,’’ the 43yearold Palestinia­n told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone, declining to give her full name.

‘‘We could die at the doors of hospitals because we can’t afford it.’’

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Can they continue? Palestinia­n schoolgirl­s attend a lesson inside a classroom at a school run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency at AlShati refugee camp in Gaza City.
PHOTO: REUTERS Can they continue? Palestinia­n schoolgirl­s attend a lesson inside a classroom at a school run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency at AlShati refugee camp in Gaza City.

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