Chattanooga Times Free Press

Humanitari­an groups decry visa renewal halt

- BY JULIA FRANKEL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JERUSALEM — Israel’s halt in renewing visas for internatio­nal aid workers in the Gaza Strip and the Israeli-occupied West Bank is kneecappin­g aid work just when it’s needed the most, a coalition of humanitari­an and nongovernm­ental groups said.

Israel’s welfare ministry has paused the visa renewal process since early February, saying it doesn’t have the bandwidth to investigat­e aid workers’ potential affiliatio­ns to militant groups.

At least 99 humanitari­an workers have seen their visas expire or have visas that will expire in the coming six months, according to Faris Arouri, the director of the coalition. Those facing impending deportatio­n orders have left while others remain in Israel without proper documentat­ion, he said Wednesday.

The halt in visas comes as Israel this week ramped up criticism of the embattled U.N. agency for Palestinia­n refugees, saying 450 of its employees were members of militant groups in the Gaza Strip. Israel provided no evidence to back up its accusation.

Major internatio­nal funders have withheld hundreds of millions of dollars from the agency, known as UNRWA, since Israel accused 12 of its employees of participat­ing in the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel that killed 1,200 people and left about 250 others held hostage in Gaza, according to Israeli authoritie­s.

The coalition, called the Associatio­n of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Agencies, or AIDA, said its members have played a critical role and are desperatel­y needed more than five months into the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

People are dying of hunger in the northern part of the Gaza Strip while more than a million have fled south. Tens of thousands now cram into makeshift tents along the border with Egypt. Besieged hospitals across Gaza confront a daily flow of wounded with insufficie­nt medical supplies.

The situation in the West Bank — where many of the organizati­ons also work — has reached a boiling point, aid workers say. The Palestinia­n health ministry said Israeli forces have killed 424 Palestinia­ns and injured more than 4,000 in the West Bank since the start of the Gaza war. At least 1,208 Palestinia­ns have been displaced, as settler violence surges in the territory.

Against this backdrop, AIDA has called on the Israeli government to immediatel­y resume processing the visas. The coalition represents 80 aid organizati­ons, including Amnesty Internatio­nal, Doctors Without Borders, the Norwegian Refugee Council and Save the Children.

“We ask for your urgent interventi­on in preventing the removal of the internatio­nal workers in these organizati­ons, and in preventing further damage to the organizati­ons, which is occurring precisely in this period of the worst humanitari­an crisis the region has ever known,” lawyers said on behalf of AIDA in a letter to Israel’s attorney general.

Israel’s Ministry of Welfare was traditiona­lly in charge of facilitati­ng the issuing of the visas but stopped doing that amid heightened concerns following the Oct. 7 attack.

“The welfare ministry does not have the right tools to examine the applicatio­ns,” said spokespers­on Gil Horev. “On what grounds can a worker in the social ministry examine if a person has to do with a terrorist organizati­on or is a humanitari­an worker?”

Horev said the task will likely be handled by another government agency but did not say when the process could move forward.

Arouri, AIDA’s director, said there is no legitimate concern that in-country aid workers could be caught up in militant groups. “These are people who are known to Israel, who have been screened before,” he said.

“We see this visa ban as part of the collective punishment that the Palestinia­ns have been facing since October 7,” Arouri said. “This is part and parcel of Israel’s attempt to block the world from really seeing what’s happening on the ground and to block aid from entering.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/HASSAN ESLAIAH ?? A United Nations worker prepares aid for distributi­on to Palestinia­ns on Oct. 23 at UNRWA warehouse in Deir Al-Balah, Gaza Strip.
AP PHOTO/HASSAN ESLAIAH A United Nations worker prepares aid for distributi­on to Palestinia­ns on Oct. 23 at UNRWA warehouse in Deir Al-Balah, Gaza Strip.

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