As reports come in that the USA may be preparing to cut a substantial portion of the aid it gives to the Palestinian Authority (PA) if the Palestinian statehood bid is successful, people in the occupied Palestinian territory are bracing for possible consequences.
Still branded a “terrorist” organization by the Quartet (European Union, UN, US and Russia), the Hamas-led government in the Gaza Strip is developing programmes to assist the poorest families as the threat of sanctions by Israel and/or the USA looms.
“We are seeking alternative aid to Gaza from Arab nations,” said Omar Al-Derbi, assistant deputy social affairs minister in Gaza. A new programme under the ministry to begin in October pairs Gaza families in need directly with families from Gulf countries. Ten thousand Gaza beneficiaries will receive 1,000 shekels (US$267) every three months for the coming year. Beneficiaries, interviewed by over 200 social workers in Gaza, include widows and the unemployed.
Shahrazad AbuThuria, 41, from Gaza City, and her six children live in a two-room garage without insulation. Her husband left her 16 years ago, and she is now unemployed. As a refugee Shahrazad receives food assistance from the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) every three months, but it is not enough to feed her family, she says.
She applied to the Gaza social affairs ministry for assistance a year ago, and says a social worker visits periodically, but her case is still under review.
“My daughter, Nida, 15, had to stop attending school, since I can’t afford uniforms,” she said. “It will for sure get worse. The siege will tighten and donor funds will decrease.”
The USA has been giving about US$200 million annually for PA budget support and roughly $350 million to support humanitarian and development projects – mainly channelled through the US State Department, the US Agency for International Development and NGOs – and not through the PA, said Ghassan Al-Khatib, spokesperson for the PA in Ramallah.
One in four Palestinians lives below the “poverty line” (defined as $609 per month for a household of two adults and three children), according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), including 18 percent of Palestinians living in the West Bank and 38 percent living in the Gaza Strip. PCSB also found that 14 percent of Palestinians were living in “deep poverty” ($478 per month for a household of two adults and three children), with 8 percent in the West Bank and 23 percent in Gaza.
These are the people most likely to be affected by possible sanctions.
“[Palestinian president Mahmoud] Abbas’s move to the UN may make our situation worse, the siege may tighten,” said Majda Bedawi, a 36-year-old refugee from Beach Camp in Gaza. She has nine children and her husband has been unemployed for five years.
Abbas’s move to the UN may make our situation worse, the siege may tighten
“We are borrowing from relatives to pay for groceries,” she added. Her family applied for social assistance last week.
EU, World Bank Assistance
At present, the plight of many of the poorest families is being eased thanks to interventions by the European Union (EU), the World Bank, and the PA.
In terms of direct financial support to the recurrent costs of the PA, the EU disbursed $213 million from January to September 2011, including $174 million for salaries/pensions and $39 million for social support. In 2010, about $345 million was disbursed to the Palestinians by the EU.
Some 87,000 Palestinian families – 47,000 in the West Bank and 40,000 in Gaza – are receiving social assistance in 2011 from a “national cash transfer programme” administered by the EU, World Bank, and the PA social affairs ministry in the West Bank, says the PA – an increase on previous years.
About 55,000 families receive EU assistance, 5,000 receive assistance from the Bank, and 27,000 from the PA (this latter group has increased in the past year).
The full integration of Gaza beneficiaries under the programme is expected by the end of 2011. As of June 2011, payments to beneficiaries in the West Bank have been transferred into individual bank accounts. For Gaza beneficiaries, benefits will continue to be paid over-the-counter until the transition to the national programme is effective. This year’s third quarterly payment was made on 3 October.
Gaza-PA Rift
Lack of communication between the PA social affairs ministry and its counterpart in Gaza is affecting the ability of impoverished families in Gaza to enter the system – although, there is greater cooperation between the two ministries than in other sectors like health care. The EU and the Bank only deal with the PA on an official level, and limit contact with the Gaza government to coordination on logistics.
The USA has been giving about US$200 million annually for PA budget support and roughly $350 million to support humanitarian and development projects – mainly channelled through the US State Department, the US Agency for International Development and NGOs – and not through the PA, said Ghassan Al-Khatib, spokesperson for the PA in Ramallah.
According to a Reuters report, the Obama administration is asking Congress to unblock its freeze on budget support assistance, imposed by the lawmakers as punishment for the PA’s bid for UN recognition of statehood.
Meanwhile, Gaza officials have been complaining about the lack of assistance from the PA. “The PA is not transferring sufficient funds as a result of the internal political conflict,” said Al-Derbi. “The ministry requested 18,000 additional families in Gaza receive assistance,” he added.
Gaza was not consulted on the statehood proposal to the UN.
(IRIN News)