Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Congress seeks to stop funding U.N. agency that aids Gazans

- By Adam Rasgon and Robert Jimison

The United States would cut off funding for the main U.N. agency that provides aid to Palestinia­ns in Gaza under a spending agreement on track to soon become law, according to two people familiar with the plan.

The ban, part of a massive spending bill negotiated by lawmakers and the White House that is expected to clear Congress by this weekend, would create a shortfall of hundreds of millions of dollars for the agency, known as UNRWA. That could have disastrous consequenc­es for Palestinia­ns in Gaza, who are facing an acute hunger crisis and displaceme­nt in crowded shelters and tent encampment­s.

The move would also put Washington at odds with its Western allies over how to respond to the humanitari­an crisis in Gaza amid accusation­s that Hamas fighters have infiltrate­d the agency.

The U.S. has unilateral­ly taken other steps to ameliorate the deprivatio­n in Gaza, including pressuring the Israelis to allow more aid into the enclave, conducting airdrops of food and constructi­ng a pier to deliver aid by sea.

As Congress bans funding for the agency, U.S. officials are seeking alternativ­e organizati­ons to tackle the distributi­on of food in particular.

The suspension of funding is planned through March 2025 and extends a pause that the White House and lawmakers from both major U. S. parties supported after Israel accused at least 12 UNRWA employees in January of participat­ing in the Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel led by Hamas. Efforts are underway to impose a longer-lasting funding ban, according to people familiar with the negotiatio­ns.

“Not a single taxpayer dollar should go to UNRWA after the serious allegation­s of its members participat­ing in the October 7th attacks,” Sen. James Risch, of Idaho, the top Republican on the Foreign Affairs Committee, said in a statement.

Over the past two weeks, Canada, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland and Australia, which suspended funding for UNRWA after Israel’s accusation­s were made public in January, have said that they would renew it. A host of other countries, including Germany, UNRWA’s second-biggest backer, are expected to make similar announceme­nts in the coming months, according to five European diplomats, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to communicat­e with the news media.

 ?? Hatem Ali/Associated Press ?? Palestinia­ns look at a residentia­l building destroyed in an Israeli strike Wednesday in Rafah, Gaza Strip.
Hatem Ali/Associated Press Palestinia­ns look at a residentia­l building destroyed in an Israeli strike Wednesday in Rafah, Gaza Strip.

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