Israel outlaws UNWRA, bucking international pressure

By The Jerusalem Post (World News) | Created at 2024-10-28 19:20:19 | Updated at 2024-10-28 21:32:39 2 hours ago
Truth

The bills passed 92-10, with support from the opposition parties National Unity, Yisrael Beytenu, and Yesh Atid. The Democrats party abstained.

By ELIAV BREUER OCTOBER 28, 2024 21:14
 MOHAMMED SALEM/REUTERS) Displaced Palestinians wait to receive United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) aid, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, March 7, 2024. (photo credit: MOHAMMED SALEM/REUTERS)

Israel's Knesset plenum approved final voting for two bills aimed at blocking the activity in areas under Israeli control of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA), which services Palestinian refugees in east Jerusalem, Gaza, and the West Bank.

The bills passed 92-10, with support from the opposition parties National Unity, Yisrael Beytenu, and Yesh Atid. The Democrats party abstained.

Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chairman MK Yuli Edelstein presented both bills in the Knesset plenum. According to Edelstein, UNWRA's operations "eternalized" the issue of Palestinian refugees. 

In addition, Edelstein cited the fact that UNWRA employees had participated in, and even served as commanders, in the October 7 Hamas massacre. According to Edelstein, the time had come to ban the agency from Israel.

Edelstein did not address in his speech who would replace the services UNWRA provides for Palestinians in east Jerusalem, Gaza, and the West Bank.

Inside the Knesset building. (credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM)

The two bills are an amalgamation of five bills that were proposed by a large number of Members of Knesset, from both the coalition and opposition, indicating broad support.

What do the bills state? 

The first bill states that UNWRA will no longer "operate any institution, provide any service, or conduct any activity, whether directly or indirectly," in Israel.

The second bill states that the treaty between Israel and UNWRA, signed following the Six-Day War in 1967, will expire within seven days of bill passing its final voting in the Knesset plenum; that no Israeli government agencies or representatives may contact UNWRA or a representative of it, beginning three months after the bill passes; that criminal proceedings into UNWRA employee's involvement in acts of terror will continue;  and that Israel's National Security Council must report to the committee every six months regarding the bill's implementation.

Edelstein told The Jerusalem Post earlier this week that the first bill relates just to east Jerusalem, since the other areas under Israeli control are not officially part of sovereign Israel, and the second broad one cancels the invitation to UNRWA to operate in any area under Israeli control and bars Israeli officials from engaging with it.

One of the bill's authors, MK Dan Illouz (Likud), said that the Jerusalem Ministry had plans in place to take over UNWRA's responsibilities in east Jerusalem. He did not detail what these plans were. 


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In addition, according to Illouz, the three-month interim period was intended to replace UNWRA's operations in the West Bank and Gaza with other agencies, which will be independently funded and will not be a budgetary burden on Israel. 

Illouz said that plans were being formulated by the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) to this effect, but that the information was classified.

Another author of the bills, MK Boaz Bismuth (Likud), wrote in a statement following the bill's passage, "UNWRA is not an agency to aid refugees, it as an aid agency for Hamas!". Bismuth also mentioned the "chilling" footage of Yonatan Smarno being kidnapped from the Nova party on October 7, by what Bismuth said was an UNWRA social worker. Smarno's father was present in the Knesset visitor's balcony during the votes.

Opposition of the bill 

The Knesset's Arab MKs, as well as members of the left-wing Democrats party, opposed the bill.

Hadash-Ta'al chairman MK Ayman Odeh responded by pointing out what he said was the "irony" that Israel opposed the fact that the descendants of Palestinian refugees retained their refugee status and claimed a "right of return", but at the same time maintained that Jewish refugees expelled 2,000 years ago had a "right of return" to the Land of Israel.

MK Ahmad Tibi, also of Hadash-Ta'al, said that there were 90,000 UNWRA workers who supplied services to Palestinian refugees, and outlawing all of them was a de-facto attempt to "harm the Palestinian people."

According to Tibi, UNWRA can be shut down when the Palestinian refugee problem is solved by the formation of a Palestinian state.

The bills were passed into law despite immense international pressure to the contrary. 

Foreign Ministers from Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea, and the United Kingdom issued a joint statement this week expressing their “grave concern” over the shutdown, particularly in light of the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza due to the war.

“It is crucial that UNRWA and other UN organizations and agencies be fully able to deliver humanitarian aid and their assistance to those who need it most, fulfilling their mandates effectively,” they said.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken also spoke with Israeli officials last week about the importance of ensuring that UNRWA remains operational. 

In addition, the Biden administration mentioned the importance of maintaining UNRWA operations, in a letter it wrote Israel in October threatening to restrict military assistance to the IDF as dictated under Memorandum 20 unless Israel took steps to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

The bills also passed despite fears that the international community could seek retribution by taking steps against it at the United Nations. 

Among the possible political actions at the UN could be a push to strip the Jewish state of voting rights at the General Assembly or the credentials of the Israeli mission to the UN could be stripped.

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