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Oxfam criticizes EU decision
to suspend aid to Palestinian Authority
Report, Oxfam, 10 April 2006
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article4625.shtml
EU foreign ministers have agreed on a freeze of EU aid to the Hamas-led
Palestinian Authority, according to newswire reports. Ministers meeting in
Luxembourg on Monday (10 April) decided to continue the European
Commission’s temporary suspension of payments to the Hamas-led government
in the Palestinian territories. The commission announced the suspension on
Friday (7 April). In a letter to the Middle East Quartet, Oxfam warned
that Palestinians are on the edge of survival. It said that "one in four
people depend on aid. Three in four live on 2 dollars a day. Their plight
will worsen, if donors stop giving aid to the Palestinian Authority."
Open letter to the Members of the Quartet and international donors
Oxfam International, the international confederation of development
organizations, is deeply concerned that the already serious humanitarian
situation facing the Palestinians may become far more acute with some
donors considering cutting funding to a Hamas-led Palestinian Authority,
and with the impact of continuing Israeli restrictions on social services
and economic activity.
Oxfam International believes that international aid should be provided
through the Palestinian institutions and local authorities charged with
delivering essential services, including health and education, regardless
of which party is in power. The Palestinian Authority was created by the
international community to meet the needs of Palestinian civilians and is
a legitimate channel for humanitarian funds.
We believe that this is the worst possible time to cut funding. The recent
elections in both the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Israel
represent significant changes in the political context and therefore an
opportunity to move the peace process forward, one that the international
community should seize. To cut funding risks squandering the positive
potential that may exist in the new governments and risks making an
already fragile situation more dangerous. Whatever the politics of such a
decision, it would be ordinary people who would suffer the consequences.
Donor aid to the Palestinian Authority accounted in 2005 for about one
quarter of Palestinian gross disposable income and pays the salaries of
152,000 employees, providing vital support to almost one million people,
or one in four of the Palestinian population. Stopping this aid would
clearly have a major impact on ordinary people.
Palestinians are already on the edge of survival, with over 60 per cent of
the population living on less than $2.10 per day. Their plight will now
worsen if international donors withhold aid to the Palestinian Authority.
Such a step would weaken the Palestinian Authority and deprive
Palestinians of critically needed health and education services at a time
when the Palestinian economy is suffering a serious reversal of
development because of Israel’s occupation and the ongoing conflict.
Suggestions that, in response to the Hamas election victory, international
donors channel humanitarian assistance through international
non-government organizations are not the answer. This would further
undermine Palestinian institutions that are vital to both immediate
assistance and any prospects for longer-term development. Moreover, few
international NGOs have the capacity to channel such funds and essential
services would suffer.
Other vital measures are also needed to ensure the capacity of the
Palestinian Authority to provide essential services and also keep the
Palestinian economy afloat. Palestinian tax revenues, which last year
totaled approximately half of the Palestinian Authority revenue, have been
withheld by Israel in violation of the internationally agreed Oslo Accords
and the Paris Protocol. They should be transferred by Israel without
delay.
Palestinian livelihoods are threatened because farmers are prevented from
reaching their fields, water supplies or sources of inputs and from
selling their produce in nearby markets, as a result of the Separation
Wall and restrictions on movement under occupation. In addition, Israel’s
repeated and often lengthy closures of the Karni crossing into the Gaza
Strip, amounting to two out of every three days so far this year, have had
a devastating impact on Gaza’s 1.3 million people. Essential food supplies
including bread, sugar and yogurt have become extremely scarce.
The Karni closures have also been catastrophic for Palestinian
agriculture, costing Palestinians up to $500,000 a day, according to
UNOCHA estimates, and coinciding with the main growing season for
cucumbers, tomatoes and peppers for the European market. It is vital that
Israel allows Palestinians free access to markets, in line with
obligations under the Paris Protocol.
Civilians suffer the most from conflict and urgently need protection under
International Law. The protection of civilians will only come through a
just peace for Palestinians and Israelis. Any framework for negotiations
must include UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338, which call for
Israeli withdrawal from lands occupied since 1967, and reaffirm the right
of Israel and a future Palestinian state to exist within secure borders.
Israel, as the occupying power, has legal responsibility under the 4th
Geneva Convention to ensure access to basic services for Palestinian
civilians. The international community also has the legal responsibility
to hold Israel accountable for any violations against the Palestinians
under International Law.
While the Quartet discusses the status of the new elected Palestinian
representatives, the current and growing pressure on Palestinian civilians
demands urgent action by the international community to bring all actors
to the conference table to seek a durable solution to the conflict in
accordance with International Law. Oxfam has consistently called on all
parties to pursue a negotiated peace settlement.
With the worsening humanitarian crisis facing Palestinians and the
potential opportunity offered by new governments in both Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian Territories, we urge you not to cut funding to the
Palestinian Authority and to redouble your diplomatic efforts to address
the humanitarian situation so that civilians are protected.
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