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Saturday, 29, April, 2006 (01, Rabi` al-Thani, 1427) 


Editorial: Funding for Palestine 
29 April 2006 —


A couple of months ago, after Hamas won the Palestinian general 
election and the US and the EU threatened to cut off aid because of
their opposition to its policies, Hamas boldly predicted that it would
find the money elsewhere. For a short while it looked as if it might
actually happen. The Russians promised aid, so did Iran; Syria
proposed an Arab fund; the Arab League said that Arab and Muslim
governments could make up the difference. In the event, whatever funds
may have been sent have amounted to almost nothing. The Palestinian
state is now in precisely the crisis that President Mahmoud Abbas
predicted. Some 165,000 Palestinian government- employees have not
been paid salaries for weeks and have to beg and borrow to survive. 

The knock-on effect is no less disastrous. Doctors, teachers, 
policemen and all the others who are on the government's payroll — the
Palestinian Authority is the largest employer in the West Bank and
Gaza — cannot pay their bills or anyone they employ, such as cleaners
and the like. The economy is in dire straits. 

Doubtless there will be many Arabs, Muslims and friends of the 
Palestinians incandescent with rage at the notion that the Americans
and Europeans should be able to "blackmail" the Hamas government. But
far more appalling is that the Palestinian Authority should have
become so totally dependent on Western aid. That's asking for trouble
— and trouble is what they have now that he who does not like the tune
has stopped paying the piper. 

The lesson that the Palestinians need to take from this disaster is
that aid they take must have a much broader base. They cannot allow
themselves to ever again slide into a state of neocolonial economic
dependency on the US and EU. It is bad politics and it is bad
economics. Not that they had much option. By default, Arabs and Muslim
governments are also complicit in this disaster. Their insufficient
giving is what has forced the Palestinians into near absolute
dependence on Western aid. Moral support is all very well, but it does
not pay salaries or feed mouths. 

The absence of brotherly Arab help has already forced President 
Mahmoud Abbas — the only man doing anything serious about the crisis 
—
 to go, cap in hand, back to the Europeans for funds. His talks in
Paris with President Chirac may have unlocked a door, but the outcome
is far from satisfactory and is going to take too much time. The
French president's proposal for the World Bank to take over
responsibility for paying Palestinian salaries is a diminution of
Palestinian sovereignty — in the same league as the idea that
Jerusalem be internationalized. 

The onus is on Arab and Muslim governments. They have to make some
fairly instant decisions. There has to be much more aid to the
Palestinian Authority. It has to be counted not in millions of
dollars, but hundred of millions. It is needed now, not in a few
months. There is no time for donor conferences and special committees.
Palestinians, who have learned the funding lesson the hard way, will
not easily forgive a lack of Arab and Muslim action at this desperate
time.






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