President Abbas of the Palestinian Authority celebrates with convicted murderers released from Israeli prisons |
Where does all that aid to Palestinians go?
TZIPI HOTOVELY
Wall Street Journal Jan 24
Note: Canada
spends about $27 million a year in aid to the Palestinian territories. The
Palestinian Authority spends 16% of its budget supporting terrorists, so if Canadian
aid went directly to the Palestinian Authority, $4 million of it would be spent
on terrorism. However, Canada puts its money into to specific projects, mainly
the development of a legal system to try to improve the rule of law in the
Palestinian territories – an aim any thinking person can support. But of course
any money spent by Canada in the Palestinian territories is money that the PA
does not have to spend itself, allowing it to divert more money into terrorism.
~ Brian
+ + +
One
often-cited key to peace between Israel and the Palestinians is economic
development. To that end, there seems to be broad agreement about the
importance of extending development aid to help the Palestinians build the
physical and social infrastructure that will enable the emergence of a
sustainable, prosperous society. But few have seriously questioned how much
money is sent and how it is used.
Such
assistance will only promote peace if it is spent to foster tolerance and
coexistence. If it is used to strengthen intransigence it does more harm than
good—and the more aid that comes in, the worse the outcome. This is exactly
what has been transpiring over the past few decades. Large amounts of foreign
aid to the Palestinians are spent to support terrorists and deepen hostility.
For
years the most senior figures in the Palestinian Authority have supported,
condoned and glorified terror. “Every drop of blood that has been spilled in
Jerusalem,” President Mahmoud
Abbas said last September on
Palestinian television, “is holy blood as long as it was for Allah.” Countless
Palestinian officials and state-run television have repeatedly hailed the
murder of Jews.
This
support for terrorism doesn’t end with hate speech. The Palestinian regime in
Ramallah pays monthly stipends of between $400 and $3,500 to terrorists and
their families, the latter of which is more than five times the average monthly
salary of a Palestinian worker.
According
to data from its budgetary reports, compiled
in June 2014 by Israel’s Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, the PA’s annual budget for supporting Palestinian terrorists
was then roughly $75 million. That amounted to some 16% of the foreign
donations the PA received annually. Overall in 2012 foreign aid made up about a
quarter of the PA’s $3.1 billion budget. More recent figures are inaccessible
since the Palestinian Authority is no longer transparent about the stipend
transfers.
Embarrassed
by public revelations of the misuse of the foreign aid, in August 2014 the
Palestinian Authority passed the task of paying stipends to terrorists and
their families to a fund managed by the Palestine Liberation Organization, also
led by Mr. Abbas. Lest there be any doubt as to the purely cosmetic nature of
the change, Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah made assurances as recently
as September 2015 that the PA will provide the “necessary assistance” to ensure
these terror stipends.
This
procedural ruse apparently calmed the consciences of donor governments that
continue to transfer aid. It is difficult to think of another case in which
such a forgiving attitude would be taken regarding foreign aid to an entity
that sponsors terror.
This
situation is particularly disturbing given the disproportionate share of
development assistance the Palestinians receive, which comes at the expense of
needy populations elsewhere. According to a report last year by Global
Humanitarian Assistance, in 2013 the Palestinians received $793 million in
international aid, second only to Syria. This amounts to $176 for each
Palestinian, by far the highest per capita assistance in the world. Syria,
where more than 250,000 people have been killed and 6.5 million refugees
displaced since 2011, received only $106 per capita.
A
closer look at the remaining eight countries in the top 10—Sudan, South Sudan,
Jordan, Lebanon, Somalia, Ethiopia, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of
Congo—is even more alarming. CIA Factbook data show that these countries have a
combined population of 284 million and an average per capita GDP of $2,376. Yet
they received an average of $15.30 per capita in development assistance in
2013. The Palestinians, by comparison, with a population of 4.5 million, have a
per capita GDP of $4,900.
In
other words, though the Palestinians are more than twice as wealthy on average
than these eight countries, they receive more than 11 times as much foreign aid
per person. The Democratic Republic of Congo is a case in point: Its 79 million
people have a per capita GDP of $700, yet they receive only $5.70 in aid per
person.
Between
1993 (when the Oslo Process began) and 2013, the Palestinians received $21.7
billion in development assistance, according to the World Bank. The Palestinian
leadership has had ample opportunity to use these funds for economic and social
development. Tragically, as seen in Hamas-run Gaza, it prefers to use the funds
on its terrorist infrastructure and weaponry, such as cross-border attack
tunnels and the thousands of missiles that have rained down in recent years on
Israel.
In
Judea and Samaria, the “West Bank,” the situation is equally disturbing. Aside
from funding terrorists and investing in hate speech, the PA stubbornly refuses
to remove hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from “refugee” rosters,
deliberately keeping them in a state of dependence and underdevelopment for no
purpose other than to stoke animosity toward Israel.
It
is difficult to come away from these facts without realizing the deep
connection between the huge amounts of foreign aid being spent, the bizarre
international tolerance for patently unacceptable conduct by the Palestinians
and the lack of progress toward peace on the ground.
Donors
to the Palestinians who support peace would do well to rethink the way they
extend assistance. Money should go to economic and civic empowerment, not to
perpetuate a false sense of victimhood and unconditional entitlement. It should
foster values of tolerance and nonviolence, not the glorification and financing
of terrorism.
Ms.
Hotovely is the deputy foreign minister of Israel.
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