US aid: An opium for Palestinians
JAMAL KANJ
Thursday, April 04, 2013
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=350763
PALESTINIAN President Mahmoud Abbas signed a $3.9 billion national
budget for the 2013 fiscal year just one day before the March 31 deadline. The
budget was approved without the required constitutional review and endorsement
of the Palestine National Council. The state's projected revenue for this year
is $2.6bn, leaving a deficit of $1.3bn to be bridged by international
benefactors.
Budget approval came on the heels of US President Barack Obama's visit,
during which he revealed a decision to release approximately $500 million in US
aid to the Palestinian Authority (PA). This includes $295.7m withheld by
Congress last year to punish the PA for upgrading its status at the United
Nations (UN). The remaining $200m was for budgetary assistance in 2013. By
releasing the aid to the PA, Obama bypassed the US Congress's objections by
declaring that it was in "the security interests of the US".
The freezing of US funding and a dearth of European Union (EU)
assistance resulted the PA facing a deficit of approximately $1.2bn last year.
Although Arab states pledged a safety net to supplant withheld US aid just as
Israel seized tax money, in reality the PA was left with a "loose
net" but for limited emergency backing from individual states, following a
direct appeal from the Palestinian president.
Late last year and in January, the Palestinian government was forced to
delay salary disbursements or pay partial salaries for the large number of
state bureaucrats.
This led to a series of street protests and an increase in the level of
confrontations with the Israeli occupying force.
Fearing what the World Bank called "social upheaval", Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered in January for the immediate release
of about $70m in tax revenue seized from the PA to help it "enforce calm
on the ground."
Approximately $1.2bn of the PA budget is administered exclusively by
Israel - from which it deducts a 10 per cent fee. This leaves the Palestinian
state in control of only $1.4bn of its revenue, or 36pc of its total budget.
The government of Palestine can't continue to function on handouts from the EU
and US, or taxes collected by Israel - especially when the US empowers the same
occupation that deprives Palestinians of enough resources and minerals to
bridge most, if not all, of the budget deficit.
In a 2012 report, the World Bank blamed Israeli policies for stymieing
"investment" and the lethargic "private sector". The report
concluded that growth is not "sustainable until Palestinians have access
to resources and are allowed to move freely".
Last month, Norwegian Foreign Minister Epsen Barth Eide attributed the
PA's continued financial crisis to Israeli restrictions in occupied Palestine.
In addition to negotiations, if conditions would ever allow it, Palestine
should consider pursuing in tandem a plan to delegitimise Israel's unilateral
moves.
Locked out of the UN Security Council by US veto power, the PA should
at least consider taking steps like accelerating its Unesco applications to
register Muslim and Christian places of worship in Jerusalem and other cultural
locations as protected World Heritage Sites. The Palestinian leadership should
stop its hollow threats of going to the International Criminal Court (ICC) if
Israel starts executing its plans to build more "Jewish only"
colonies. Palestine should first become a full-fledged member of the ICC and
join other UN organisations.
They must develop a new approach whereby for every Israeli unilateral
action, there is an equal, independent Palestinian reaction.
Decades of bleating to pitiful world powers in closed meeting rooms has
only accelerated the building of "Jewish only" colonies on the hills
of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
In the absence of peace, the inept international community will succumb
to special interest groups and choose the status quo instead of confronting
Israeli intransigence. But foreign aid money should not become an
"opium" with which to preserve the status quo in Palestine.
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