The Oklahoman

UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees in need of donations

- Edith M. Lederer

UNITED NATIONS – Despite a dire warning from the United Nations chief that the U.N. agency for Palestinia­n refugees “is on the verge of financial collapse,” donors at a pledging conference on Friday provided just $107 million in new funds – significantly less than the $300 million it needs to keep helping millions of people.

Philippe Lazzarini, commission­er general of the agency known as UNRWA, said he was grateful for the new pledges but they are below the funds needed to keep over 700 schools and 140 clinics open from September through December.

“We will continue to work tirelessly with our partners, including host countries – the refugees’ top supporters – to raise the funds needed,” he said in a statement.

At the beginning of the year, UNRWA appealed for $1.6 billion for its programs, operations and emergency response across Syria, Lebanon, the Israeli-occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip and Jordan. That includes nearly $850 million for its core budget, which includes running schools and health clinics.

According to UNRWA, donors on Friday announced $812.3 million in pledges, but just $107.2 million were new contributi­ons. The countries pledging new funds were not announced.

Lazzarini said Thursday that UNRWA needs $150 million to keep all services running until the end of the year, and an additional $50 million to start 2024 without liabilitie­s. In addition, he said, the agency needs $75 million to keep the food pipeline in Gaza operating and about $30 million for its cash distributi­on program in Syria and Lebanon.

UNRWA was founded in the wake of the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 to provide hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns who fled or were forced from their homes with education, health care, social services and in some cases jobs. Today, their numbers have grown to some 5.9 million people, most in the Gaza Strip and West Bank as well as neighborin­g countries in the Middle East.

UNRWA has faced a financial crisis for 10 years, but Lazzarini said the current crisis is “massive,” calling it “our main existentia­l threat.”

“The situation is even more critical now that some of our committed donors have indicated that they will substantia­lly decrease their contributi­on to the agency,” he said.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a speech read by his chief of staff at the start of the pledging conference that “when UNRWA’s future hangs in the balance so do the lives of millions of Palestine refugees relying on essential services.”

Those services include education for over half a million girls and boys, health care for around 2 million people, job opportunit­ies for young people in Gaza and elsewhere, psycho-social support for hundreds of thousands of children, and a social safety net for nearly half a million of the poorest Palestinia­ns, he said. More than 1.2 million Palestinia­ns also receive humanitari­an assistance.

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