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Middle East & Israel Breaking News » International News » Article

Peretz plans to transfer PA tax funds


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Defense Minister Amir Peretz requested on Wednesday that Yusuf Mishleb, the government's coordinator in the Palestinian territories, prepare a detailed plan that would facilitate the transfer of some NIS 50 million in tax funds to the Palestinian Authority.

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni
Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski

SLIDESHOW: Israel & Region  |  World

Peretz said he would present the plan to the cabinet on Sunday.

The defense minister has thrown his weight behind Foreign Minsiter Tzipi Livni, who earlier Wednesday said that Israel was willing to release tax revenue it has withheld from the Palestinian Authority since February to pay for humanitarian aid.

The offer, made to the Quartet following its Tuesday decision to create a fund to pay for humanitarian aid to Palestinians, is an extension of the policy of using the withheld money to pay for electricity and sewage services.

Livni said that Israel would consider releasing the tax funds "for direct humanitarian needs, such as medicines, such as health needs." However, she told Channel 10, the money could not go to the Palestinian Authority to pay salaries.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Gideon Meir said later the money would only be used to buy "goods and services for medical care that can help the Palestinians."

Exiled Hamas leader Khaled...

Exiled Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal, right, meets Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Teheran. [file]
Photo: Associated Press [file] , AP

Since February, Israel has placed in escrow approximately $50 million a month in taxes and tariffs it collects on behalf of the PA and said it would not transfer the funds until its Hamas-controlled government recognizes Israel, renounces violence and accepts all signed agreements.

MK Yuval Steinitz (Likud) criticized both Israel's and the Quartet's decisions to provide the aid.

"If we want to make clear to the Palestinian people and everybody else that nobody can support a terrorist government, then we cannot support the Palestinian Authority by other means," he said. "The Quartet decision was wrong and very damaging, and if we proceed in this direction, the next result will be that we will in fact be supporting a terrorist regime."

The mechanism under development by the European Commission to ameliorate the humanitarian situation in the PA territories will likely not funnel money through the office of PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas as initial reports had suggested, EC officials in Brussels said Wednesday.

But against the wishes of Israel and the US, the mechanism may be used to pay salaries of some PA officials, EC external affairs spokeswoman Emma Udwin told The Jerusalem Post.

Rather than send money to Abbas as has been proposed, the EC would work on "a mechanism outside of the PA," she said. "We are not in the business of creating parallel structures. Something that mirrored what happens within the Ministry of Finance of the PA, we are not interested in."

With a bow from the US to the positions of the EU, UN and Russia, the Quartet on Tuesday expressed support for a new mechanism that would funnel funds directly to the Palestinians, to stabilize the deteriorating conditions in the PA territories.

The EC was charged by the Quartet with developing a funding mechanism that would bypass Hamas.
Under the format under consideration, Abbas would act as an interlocutor, facilitating the implementation of aid projects while not being responsible for dispersing any money.

Udwin allowed for the possibility that the new mechanism would be used to pay the salaries of some PA civil servants. "Clearly something must be done with basic services like health and education," she said. "But we haven't said whether that means salaries or not."

The mechanism will be used for three months, after which the Quartet will review its effectiveness, Udwin said.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh did not comment on the Quartet's decision, instead attacking it for persisting with its demand that Hamas accommodate Israel.

"The Quartet brings from time to time conditions to force the government to concede the rights and recognize the legality of the occupation," Haniyeh said early Wednesday.

Abbas aide Nabil Abu Rdeneh pronounced the decision satisfactory, and called on the Quartet to "find a mechanism to rapidly provide our people with aid." Hamas's political chief in exile, Khaled Mashaal, while on a visit to Qatar on Wednesday, asked "Hamas supporters throughout the world, as well as Arab states, to send weapons, fighters and money to the Palestinian Authority."

Israel reacted with cautious optimism to the proposal, saying it would support any humanitarian funding that cuts out the Hamas-led PA.

"We have no interest whatsoever in hardship, and we will do everything that we can to facilitate this direct sort of funding that bypasses the regime," Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said.

However paying salaries is a different story, with both Israeli and American officials saying Wednesday that they could only support such a move under extremely limited circumstances, to a select few PA civil servants and with the money being transferred directly from the international community to the employees.

Direct funding of a health clinic and its doctors, an Israeli official said, might be acceptable. But "schools are a problem because Hamas schools will teach kids to hate; they will teach Palestinian kids to become suicide bombers," the official said.

If the new mechanism helps pay the salaries of some civil servants, the decision could represent the first backtracking by the international community from its declared policy of not funding a Hamas-led PA.

The move by the Quartet comes after numerous reports over the last week highlighting the severe state of the health care system throughout the PA territories, particularly in the Gaza Strip.
The World Bank and a host of non-governmental organizations operating in the territories have warned that as long as funding is withheld, poverty, unemployment and food insecurity will rise dramatically as the PA economy experiences a sharp contraction.

It was those dire prospects that the Quartet is seeking to address by developing "a temporary international mechanism, limited in duration and scope and fully accountable, that ensures direct delivery of any assistance to the Palestinian people," according to the statement released following its New York meeting.

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