by Ariel Kahana
Palestinian Authority already has $1 billion deficit and would be pushed to "breaking point" if Israel implements law to deduct stipends paid to terrorists from tax funds Israel collects for the PA, U.N. Middle East envoy and European officials say.
U.N. Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov
Photo: Momen Faiz/NurPhoto
U.N. Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov
and European officials have reportedly warned Israel that the
Palestinian Authority could collapse if Israel implements a law to deduct stipends paid to terrorists from the tax revenue Israel collects on the PA's behalf.
Diplomatic officials relayed messages to
Jerusalem saying that implementing the law would bring the PA, already
in a dire financial situation, to its "breaking point" and could cause a
complete "system failure."
The officials said the PA already has a $1
billion deficit, and if the law is implemented, donor countries would
stop paying for the PA's daily operations and instead would fund
humanitarian projects.
Terrorists in an Israeli prison receive visitors
Photo: Moshe Shai
While foreign officials have decided to raise their concerns with Jerusalem, they are not pressuring Israel at this time.
The so-called terrorist payments law was
enacted six months ago. It stipulates that at the beginning of every
calendar year, Israel's defense minister must report to the cabinet the total amount paid by the PA to terrorists imprisoned in Israel and their families,
after which the minister must withhold that amount from the tax
revenues Israel collects for the PA. The funds are to be deposited in a
trust until the Palestinians stop using them to encourage terrorism.
The law includes a clause promoted by Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in which payments made by the Israeli
government to communities near the Gaza border to cover damage caused by
Palestinian arson terrorism are also to be deducted from PA's tax
revenues.
According to government assessments, the PA
pays over 1 billion shekels ($270 million) in terrorist stipends every
year, and its finances will be hit hard by the funding cuts.
Senior diplomatic and security officials in
Israel voiced concerns that the cuts would cripple the PA, but the
bill's proponents, Yesh Atid MK Elazar Stern and Likud MK Avi Dichter,
insisted on pushing the bill through and called the defense
establishment's warnings exaggerated.
Netanyahu has publicly condemned the PA's
practice of paying stipends to terrorists. In a speech to the U.N.,
Netanyahu slammed PA President Mahmoud Abbas for "proudly paying
Palestinian terrorists who murdered Jews. In fact, the more they kill,
the more you pay. That is also in their laws."
Ariel Kahana
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/11/05/un-europe-warn-israel-not-to-cut-martyr-payments-from-pa-tax-revenues/
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