Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Where’s aid? Palestinia­n asks Arabs

Broken promises a boon for militant Hamas, premier tells regional allies

- KARIN LAUB AND MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH

RAMALLAH, West Bank — The Palestinia­n self-rule government is close to being “completely incapacita­ted,” largely because Arab countries haven’t delivered hundreds of millions of dollars in promised aid, the Palestinia­n prime minister said in an interview Sunday.

If allowed to continue, the Palestinia­n Authority’s unpreceden­ted financial crisis will quickly double the number of Palestinia­n poor to 50 percent of a population of roughly 4 million, Salam Fayyad said.

Fayyad said the malaise is further boosting the political appeal of the Islamic militant Hamas while discrediti­ng him and other proponents of a nonviolent path to statehood in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem. Hamas seized Gaza from Fayyad’s boss, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, in a 2007 takeover, leaving Abbas with only the West Bank.

The failure of the West Bank-based Palestinia­n Authority to deliver on many of its promises, coupled with recent Israeli concession­s to Hamas, “has produced a reality of a doctrinal win for what Hamas stands for, and correspond­ingly a doctrinal defeat for the Palestinia­n Authority,” Fayyad said.

The Palestinia­n Authority was establishe­d nearly two decades ago, as part of interim peace deals with Israel, and was meant to make way after five years for a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel. However, Israeli- Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns repeatedly broke down, at times amid bursts of violence, and failed to produce a final deal.

After the outbreak of the second Palestinia­n uprising in 2000, which resulted in harsh Israeli restrictio­ns on Palestinia­n trade and movement, the Palestinia­n Authority became heavily dependent on foreign aid. It has received hundreds of millions of dollars each year since then, but has struggled to wean itself off foreign support.

Fayyad said his budget deficit has widened in recent years, blaming Arab states that broke aid promises.

“The financing problem that we’ve had ... in the last few years is solely due to some Arab donors not fulfilling their pledge of support in accordance with Arab League resolution­s,” Fayyad said. European countries kept all their aid commitment­s and the U.S. honored most, with the exception of $200 million held up by Congress last year, he added.

The crisis worsened sharply after the U.N. General Assembly voted overwhelmi­ngly in late November, at the request of Abbas, to recognize a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, the territorie­s Israel captured in 1967. Israel objected to the U.N. upgrade, accusing Abbas of trying to bypass negotiatio­ns.

Starting in December, Israel halted the monthly transfers of about $100 million in tax rebates it collects on behalf of the Palestinia­ns. That sum amounts to about one-third of the monthly operating costs of the Palestinia­n Authority. Fayyad said he now only takes in about $50 million a month in revenue.

On Sunday, Abbas declared that his Palestinia­n Authority would be known as the State of Palestine from now on, in keeping with U.N. recognitio­n of Palestine as a nonmember observer state in November.

Fayyad’s heftiest monthly budget item is the government payroll. The Palestinia­n Authority employs some 150,000 people, including civil servants and members of the security forces. About 60,000 live in Gaza and served under Abbas before the Hamas takeover, but they continue to draw salaries even though they’ve since been replaced by Hamas loyalists.

In recent months, the government has paid salaries in installmen­ts.

Fayyad said he managed to pay half the November salaries by getting another bank loan, using as collateral a promise by the Arab League to cover whatever money Israel might withhold in retaliatio­n for the U.N. bid. The money from the Arab states never came, and Fayyad said he can’t pay the rest of the November salaries, let alone December wages.

The Palestinia­n Authority already owes local banks more than $ 1.3 billion and can’t get more loans. It also owes hundreds of millions of dollars to private suppliers, and some have stopped doing business with the government.

 ?? AP/MAJDI MOHAMMED ?? Palestinia­n Prime Minister Salam Fayyad speaks with The Associated Press on Sunday in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
AP/MAJDI MOHAMMED Palestinia­n Prime Minister Salam Fayyad speaks with The Associated Press on Sunday in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

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