Abbas seeks EU funding

Bookmark and Share

By Peggy Corlin
- 27th April 2006

Mahmoud Abbas is in Paris to discuss new ways to channel aid to the Palestinian territories as the economic and social situation there continues to deteriorate.

The president of the Palestinian Authority met with French President Jacques Chirac to discuss plans for a new fund, under the control of the World Bank, which would allow aid to be paid directly to the Palestinian people.

The money would not be paid through the Hamas-led government.

“France proposes that its European and international partners should reflect quickly on a new system that would enable us to resume aid payments,” Chirac said after the meeting.

Abbas, whose Fatah party was defeated by Hamas in the recent elections, has already visited Turkey, Norway and Finland to plead for more cash for the Palestinian Authority.

“Aid to the Palestinian people must be pursued, above all humanitarian aid and aid necessary to pay officials’ salaries,” Abbas said.

“The issue is crucial for the life of the Palestinian people; otherwise we are heading for disaster.”

The EU decided in early April to cut direct aid to the Palestinian Authority after Hamas refused to recognise Israel’s right to exisit or back the peace process - conditions set by the quartet of the EU, the US, Russia and the UN.

EU money is not only used for humanitarian aid - it also helps pay the salaries of Palestinian officials, some 165,000 of whom have not been paid since February.

More than a quarter of the Palestinian population are thought to depend on the salaries of officials.

EU external relations commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner told MEPs on Wednesday that the suspension of EU aid was not “a definitive decision”.

“We are reviewing all the projects that include payments via the Palestinian Authority to find out alternative solutions,” she said.

“We are studying the possibility, with other donators, of setting an international system of supervision that would ease control over funds.”

International aid to the Palestinians is worth $1.3bn a year, with the EU being the biggest contributor with €500m.

Bookmark and Share

Have your say...

Please enter your comments below.

Name

Your e-mail address


Listen to audio version

Please type in the letters or numbers shown above (case sensitive)

Related News

Far right slams 'totalitarian' Europe

EU treaty first says Sarkozy

EU urged to act over Bulgarian medics

Bulgarian eco-groups seek EU support against Sofia

Franco-German alliance 'still special'



Latest news

Homeless people 'excluded' from European rights

ALDE deputy Niccolo Rinaldi has said that homeless people in the EU are being "excluded" from their rights to European citizenship and freedom of movement


EU urged to 'keep up the pressure' on Iran

A leading MEP says it is "vital" the international community keeps the pressure on Iran over its alleged nuclear enrichment programme


Parliament president talks of Germany's 'difficult' history

Parliament's president Martin Schulz has spoken of the "demons" of Germany' past during a press conference discussion on the 'Armenian genocide' of 1915-16


EU-India summit 'will give impetus' to trade talks


Senior EU official denies that ETS is discriminatory


Turkish minister appeals for quick resolution to Cyprus problem


Human rights and ETS under spotlight at EU-China summit


Commission's FTT proposal 'a step in the right direction'


More from Dods