by Shlomo Cesana
Palestinians' debts to Israelis currently stand at NIS 500 million ($140 million), which the Palestinian Authority has been unable to collect from 20,716 individuals
Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked
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Photo credit: Dudi Vaaknin |
Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked is exploring
the possibility of using the Palestinian Authority's tax revenue, which
Israel collects on the PA's behalf, to pay off debts owed by Palestinian
individuals to Israelis, her office said Thursday.
Under the 1993 Oslo Accords, a mechanism was
set up by which Israel collects taxes -- value added tax and customs
fees -- on behalf of the Palestinian Authority, to the tune of about
$100 million a month.
Palestinians' debts to Israelis currently
stand at some 500 million shekels ($140 million), which the Palestinian
Authority has been unable to collect from 20,716 individuals.
The situation involves 53,506 cases in which
court orders or writs of execution have been issued by the Justice
Ministry's Enforcement and Collection Authority in cases where Israelis
involved in transactions with Palestinian were not paid or provided the
service for which they paid.
All cases involve transactions under NIS 75,000 ($21,000).
Shaked has reportedly asked her office to
explore whether the Palestinian Authority could be held liable for the
debts and whether Israel could deduct these sums from the PA's monthly
tax revenue.
Israel has withheld tax revenues it collects
on the Palestinians behalf several times in the past, over Ramallah's
debts to the Israel Electric Corporation or as a punitive measure over
the stipends the PA pays terrorists' families.
A Justice Ministry official explained that
Israelis can pursue legal measures against Palestinian debtors via
Palestinian attorneys and the Palestinian Authority's debt collection
mechanism, but chances of such cases succeeding are slim.
Israelis may also seek legal remedies such as imposing a lien on assets a Palestinian debtor may have in Israel, but if that is not the case, Israelis find it exceedingly difficult to pursue debt collection procedures and are at risk of forfeiting their money, as Article 126 of the Enforcement and Collection Authority's regulations states that a collection case may be closed if no action has been taken in it for two years.
Israelis may also seek legal remedies such as imposing a lien on assets a Palestinian debtor may have in Israel, but if that is not the case, Israelis find it exceedingly difficult to pursue debt collection procedures and are at risk of forfeiting their money, as Article 126 of the Enforcement and Collection Authority's regulations states that a collection case may be closed if no action has been taken in it for two years.
Shlomo Cesana
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=44187
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