Los Angeles Times

Undercutti­ng peace

The U. S. freeze on aid to Palestinia­ns undermines a Mideast solution.

- Noura Erakat is a human rights attorney and assistant professor at George Mason University.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency — better known as UNRWA — was created after 750,000 Palestinia­ns f led their homes during the 1948 Arab- Israeli conf lict. Refugees in the Gaza Strip will mark the 70th anniversar­y of that exodus on May 15, the culminatio­n of the symbolic “Great Return March” that has brought thousands of protesters to the territory’s border with Israel this month, where they have consistent­ly met excessive, lethal force from the Israeli army.

President Trump insists he can broker a deal to end the hostilitie­s for good, but early this year his administra­tion froze 83% of America’s funding for UNRWA, a move that could cripple the agency, intensify the situation along the Gaza border and undermine the chance for a lasting peace.

The U. N. resolution that created UNRWA charged the agency with providing relief to “prevent distress” among Palestinia­n refugees and furthering “conditions of peace and stability.” With contributi­ons from the U. N. member nations, including the United States — UNRWA’s most loyal and generous supporter — the agency has supplied essential food, water, healthcare and education to roughly 5 million people in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

Since 2007, close to 2 million Palestinia­ns have been effectivel­y trapped in the Gaza Strip. Israel has sealed it off, and the border with Egypt opens rarely. The effects have been catastroph­ic. Unemployme­nt there is greater than 41%, and the number of Palestinia­ns in Gaza relying on UNRWA for food has surged from fewer than 80,000 in 2000 to almost 1 million today.

In January, the U. S. abruptly announced that it would withhold more than half of a $ 125million installmen­t on its 2018 funding for UNRWA. Annually, the U. S. has contribute­d about $ 365 million to the agency, but the Trump administra­tion has now made it clear that UNRWA will not receive humanitari­an aid without political conditions attached. U. S. representa­tives portrayed the freeze as a means of encouragin­g other donors to step forward, but sources indicate that the Trump administra­tion is predicatin­g UNRWA’s funding on Palestinia­n officials’ willingnes­s to reenter peace talks, despite conditions that make key negotiatio­n issues, such as the status of Jerusalem, a foregone conclusion.

Conditioni­ng aid on political action turns humanitari­an assistance on its head. Since its inception, UNRWA has strived to remain impartial amid inf ighting, violence and turmoil, concentrat­ing on helping Palestinia­ns in need, regardless of their politics.

In Gaza, for example, residents have been thrust into an internal struggle since 2007, when Hamas consolidat­ed its control of the territory. In retaliatio­n, the Fatah- dominated Palestinia­n Authority has repeatedly reduced the supply of electricit­y to Gaza, causing water treatment facilities to shut down, slowing the f low of potable water to a drip and forcing raw sewage to back up into Gaza’s streets.

UNRWA has trucked in emergency supplies of clean, drinkable water to more than 250 Gaza schools, where the agency educates almost a quarter of a million children. When foul water caused outbreaks of infection and diarrhea among refugees, UNRWA’s health clinics have provided emergency medical care and organized sanitation efforts at the agency’s schools and camps.

Last year, more than 19,000 individual­s benefited from short- term employment through UNRWA’s job- creation program in Gaza. In addition, to manage its operations, the agency employs more than 14,000 Gazans. All told, last year UNRWA employed 8.5% of the entire Gazan labor force.

UNRWA relies on the generosity of internatio­nal donors. The U. S. contributi­on typically makes up about 30% of the agency’s budget. Without consistent U. S. funding, conditions in Gaza could easily slip from barely adequate to intolerabl­e.

UNRWA has proved a crucial source of stability through 70 years of political turmoil for Palestinia­ns, largely because it has concentrat­ed on administer­ing relief based entirely on need. It has steadfastl­y held off one looming humanitari­an catastroph­e after another in Gaza and throughout the Palestinia­n diaspora, keeping alive the hope that a political solution is within reach.

Cutting UNRWA’s funding undermines efforts to sustain that hope and to create the conditions that ensure the rights of all parties in the conf lict. If the United States wants to be part of paving a path toward Middle East peace, it should restore its contributi­on to the agency, and reestablis­h itself as a global humanitari­an leader.

 ?? Said Khatib AFP/ Getty I mages ?? THE NUMBER of Palestinia­ns in Gaza relying on the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for food has surged from fewer than 80,000 in 2000 to almost 1 million today.
Said Khatib AFP/ Getty I mages THE NUMBER of Palestinia­ns in Gaza relying on the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for food has surged from fewer than 80,000 in 2000 to almost 1 million today.

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