by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Australian Senator Eric Abetz: It is vital that we ensure our foreign aid is not being spent on promoting terrorism.
Australian Foreign
Minister Julie Bishop at the United Nations
Photo: Reuters
Australia
said Monday that it has ended direct aid to the Palestinian Authority
because Australian donations could increase the self-governing body's
capacity to pay Palestinians convicted of "politically motivated
violence."
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said
Australia had cut funding to the World Bank's Multi-Donor Trust Fund for
the Palestinian Recovery and Development Program after writing to the
Palestinian Authority in late May seeking assurances that Australian
funding was not going to Palestinian criminals.
"I am confident that previous Australian
funding to the PA through the World Bank has been used as intended.
However, I am concerned that in providing funds for this aspect of the
PA's operations there is an opportunity for it to use its own budget to
[fund] activities that Australia would never support," Bishop said in a
statement.
"Any assistance provided by the Palestine
Liberation Organization to those convicted of politically motivated
violence is an affront to Australian values and undermines the prospect
of meaningful peace between Israel and the Palestinians," she added.
The country's annual donation of 10 million
Australian dollars ($7.4 million) to the trust fund will now be
rerouted to the United Nations' Humanitarian Fund for the Palestinian
Territories which provides vulnerable Palestinians with health care,
food, water, improved sanitation and shelter.
Australia allocated AU$43 million ($32
million) for humanitarian assistance in the region for the current
fiscal year, which began on July 1.
In March, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu praised the U.S. government for passing a law that suspended
some financial aid to the Palestinians over the stipends paid to
families of Palestinians terrorists killed or jailed in fighting with
Israel.
The Taylor Force Act, named after an
American killed in Israel by a Palestinian in 2016, was folded into a
$1.3 trillion spending bill signed by President Donald Trump.
Netanyahu called the law a "powerful signal
by the U.S. that changes the rules" by cutting "hundreds of millions of
dollars for the Palestinian Authority that they invest in encouraging
terrorism."
Australian Senator Eric Abetz welcomed Bishop's stance.
"Minister Bishop's strong and decisive
decision today to ensure that the Palestinian Authority can no longer
use our aid to free up money in its budget for state-promoted terrorism
is very positive," Abetz said.
"It is vital that we ensure that our
foreign aid is not being spent on, or making money available for, the
promotion of terrorism and so funneling our aid to the Palestinian
territories through the United Nations will provide greater assurance
that the Palestinian Authority's clever accounting cannot occur," he
added.
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/07/02/australia-ends-direct-aid-to-palestinian-authority/
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