Tuesday, October 4, 2011

US aid freeze threatens state projects


RAMALLAH (Reuters) -- Economic and humanitarian projects deemed vital for peace in the Middle East are threatened by a freeze on $200 million in aid by US Congress members opposed to a Palestinian bid for statehood at the United Nations, Palestinians and Western diplomats say.

They say the freeze, on money approved for the Palestinians this year, mixes politics with practical efforts to build peace with Israel and establish a Palestinian state.

The Palestinian Authority cabinet, in a statement issued after its weekly meeting on Tuesday, "expressed hope that the US Congress would reconsider the freezing of aid allocated to the Palestinian National Authority".

"Some parties in the Congress stood not only against the interests of the Palestinian people but also against any possibility of achieving growth for a people under occupation," said Hassan Abu Libdeh, economy minister in the West Bank.

"It was strange, and I expect the decision will be viewed negatively by Palestinian public opinion and it will influence the entire credibility of the United States," he added.

"We are talking about $200 million divided among projects of the private sector, projects that have to do with the water sector, the infrastructure."

A small group of young Palestinians staged a protest outside a Ramallah restaurant where American diplomats were lunching and one threw his shoe at the visitors.

About 20 activists watched by police chanted defiant slogans in English, shouting "Shame on you", "No to American Funding" and "Yes we can, boycott America".

Clinics and doctors

Projects under way with USAID for the past three years include a five-year development of the health sector, training medical and administrative staffers, rehabilitating hospitals and equipping them.

Fathi Abu Moghli, minister of health in the West Bank, said none of the health projects -- worth a total of $87 million -- was suspended as yet. In Jericho, work had been stopped on a municipality building.

US President Barack Obama is lobbying Congress to unblock the aid, although he has also warned that seeking statehood via a UN vote cannot be a substitute for a negotiated peace treaty with Israel.

President Mahmoud Abbas last month submitted a formal application to the UN Security Council for recognition of Palestinian statehood, ignoring a US threat to veto the measure if it is put to vote.

Palestinian officials say Obama's veto threat was a clear indication that Washington was not a genuine "honest broker" in diplomatic efforts to resolve the 63-year-old Middle East conflict.

Talks halted

Direct peace negotiations collapsed a year ago after Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu refused to extend a limited moratorium on building Jewish-only settlements in the West Bank.

Abbas says he will only return to talks if settlement building is stopped, complicating efforts by the "Quartet" of Middle East peace mediators -- the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia -- to get both sides back to the negotiating table quickly.

"What this (US aid) money actually goes to are economic support projects, social projects and ... security," said Quartet peace envoy Tony Blair, who is also trying to persuade Congress to let the aid flow as planned this year and next.

"I still hope at some point that it will be possible to persuade people that this isn't really a good idea; that even if you're completely opposed to the Palestinian bid in the United Nations, this is not the right way to respond to it because it's harming Palestinian people and it's harming the very things that over the past few years we've been most strongly supportive of."

The PA has "made huge strides on security, on economic infrastructure, on all sorts of things to do with the growth of the economy which have resulted in double-digit growth on the West Bank in the last few years", making the West Bank government less aid-dependent, Blair told the BBC on Monday.

The PA, which exercises limited rule in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, has often failed to pay its 150,000 employees on time and in full and remains reliant on foreign aid to fill a deficit projected at $900 million this year.

The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank say that financial problems threaten the state-building program overseen by Salam Fayyad, prime minister in the West Bank.

The 27-member European Union, the PA's single biggest funder, has said that it will continue funding the West Bank government.


Maan News Agency

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