Middle East Quartet should end Palestinian Authority aid boycott and press Israel to release confiscated taxes
Increasing levels of poverty – health and education near melt-down – peace further away.
International agency Oxfam said today that conditions in the Occupied Palestinian Territories were close to melt-down. It called on members of the European Union (EU), especially the UK and Germany, to press the Quartet to end the boycott of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and put pressure on Israel to release confiscated Palestinian taxes. The call comes as the Middle East Quartet – the US, EU, Russia and the UN – meets in Berlin on Wednesday 21 February to discuss the peace process.
The agency warned that with Palestinian poverty levels rapidly increasing and basic services such as health and education crumbling, the chances of peace were diminishing. Internal conflicts in the Occupied Palestinian Territories have been greatly exacerbated by the inability of the PA to deliver essential services because of a lack of money.
"The Quartet needs to take off its blinkers and see the damage its policies are having on ordinary Palestinian families. Using international aid as a battering ram to force through political change is not only immoral but also counter-productive. While the Palestinian Authority is bled dry by Israel's seizure of tax revenue and the international aid boycott peace will be a distant dream. Oxfam recognizes Israel's right to exist as part of a two-state solution. Oxfam urges all parties to end violence as well as policies that lead to human suffering," said Jeremy Hobbs, Oxfam International Director.
In 2005 the Palestinian Authority received $814 million in customs and taxes collected by Israel, plus $348 million in international aid and nearly $394 million from domestic revenues. Since the election of Hamas, two-thirds of the Palestinian Authority's income has been slashed due to Israel's withholding of taxes and the Quartet's aid embargo.
"These policies are having a huge impact, creating a social crisis that is hitting families in the Occupied Territories. Oxfam is calling on the Quartet to put pressure on Israel to release confiscated Palestinian Authority tax revenue and to handover all these Palestinian funds," said Hobbs.
Since 2006 poverty has shot up. Two thirds of Palestinians now live in poverty, a rise of 30 per cent last year. The number of families unable to get enough food has risen by 14 per cent. More than half of all Palestinians are now are 'food insecure', unable to meet their families' daily requirements without assistance. The health system is disintegrating.
Public servants, such as doctors, nurses, teachers and police officers, are worst hit. They haven't had a regular income since February 2006. Their poverty rate has risen from 35 per cent in 2005 to 71 per cent in 2006. According to the World Bank public sector wage arrears stood at $572m by the end of October 2006.
In an effort to avoid a humanitarian crisis the EU increased its aid and set up a Temporary International Mechanism (TIM) to channel aid to the Occupied Palestinian Territories while by-passing the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority. The TIM gives support to some of the very needy but it fails to address the needs of the majority. It undermines Palestinian structures, is ineffective and is causing divisions within Palestinian society.
Oxfam warned that this temporary measure risks becoming a permanent fixture and the Quartet's proposal to expand the mechanism would only hasten the decline of existing Palestinian structures best able to deliver basic services.
The Quartet's decision to withhold funds from the elected Authority has convinced many Palestinians that the Quartet is not genuinely committed to democracy in the Middle East.
Contact Information
For more information, please contact:
Shaista Aziz +44 (0)1865 473152, +44 (0)7810 814980
Ian Bray +44 (0)1865 472289, +44 (0)7721 469631
-
Peace, love & music. This isn't Woodstock, it's #Mali http://t.co/lE4EE8CoyZ1 hour 43 min ago
-
#Mali emerges as most fragile country in Africa's Sahel region. Displacement & humanitarian funding totals http://t.co/Ro3q9jLKnq @reliefweb2 hours 23 min ago
-
We’ve come a long way baby… or have we? The 7 #Women's Empowerment Principles http://t.co/g0kFCHOPeD #BehindTheBrands @UN_Women3 hours 2 min ago
-
Almost 7M people are in need. Life in #Syria's conflict zone: photos http://t.co/ayQ4TgH8wL #SyriaCrisis5 hours 17 min ago
-
Oxfam warns of health risks to #Syria #refugees as summer approaches http://t.co/hyO0oLc3OW Pls support our #SyriaCrisis appeal5 hours 45 min ago
-
+80 countries pledged aid at last wk's #MaliConference, including an add'l $32M from the US http://t.co/WCukv0SV7x6 hours 32 min ago
-
Thx for speaking up for women: @MarsGlobal,#Mondelez & @Nestle have now moved from words 2 action http://t.co/laFtaWajFI #BehindTheBrands2 days 19 hours ago
-
UN agency and Slow Food group partner to boost livelihoods of small farmers http://t.co/l0YMT9yyk8 @SlowFoodHQ3 days 1 hour ago
-
RT @oxfamgbpress: Oxfam very relieved that Cyclone #Mahasen did not cause damage to vulnerable communities in Myanmar http://t.co/t2VwONPjs03 days 2 hours ago
-
RT @annamac33: The #ArmsTreaty can create a safer future for millions. Urge the US to sign! http://t.co/HRlNC8BcO33 days 2 hours ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @KristinDavis @GaelGarciaB @driverminnie @liviafirth @baabamaal @HelenLMirren @BoseOfficial3 days 3 hours ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @AnnieLennox @djimonhounsou @angeliquekidjo @firthcom @coldplay @RahulBose1 http://t.co/rXOrgldjlt3 days 3 hours ago
-
Thanks for speaking up for women! @MarsGlobal #Mondelez & @Nestle have moved from words to action http://t.co/pMvtbhesPh #BehindTheBrands3 days 5 hours ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @IntermonOxfam @OxfamIndia @OxfamJapan @oxfamnovib @OxfamQuebec @Oxfam_mcm @OxfamItalia @oxfam_sol @oxfamfrance3 days 6 hours ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @OxfamIreland @oxfamcanada @OxfamAustralia @Oxfam_DE @OxfamAmerica @oxfamgb @oxfamnz @oxfamhongkong @oxfammexico3 days 6 hours ago
