Israel votes to withhold $43 million of Palestinian funds

Israel votes to withhold $43 million of Palestinian funds
Israel will withhold millions of Palestinian tax funds in a move that is being described as 'blatant theft'.
2 min read
30 December, 2019
The Israeli cabinet made the decision on Sunday [Getty]
The Israeli Security Cabinet on Sunday voted to withhold $43 million of tax funds from Palestine, claiming the money has been used to promote violence, Israeli media reported.

The sum represents funds that Israel says the Palestinians have used to pay the families of Palestinians who have been jailed or killed as a result of attacking Israel, according to various reports.

Israel says the so-called 'Martyrs' Fund' rewards violence, while the Palestinians say the payments are needed to help vulnerable families affected by violence and Israeli occupation.

Under past agreements, Israel has collected customs and other taxes on behalf of the Palestinians, which is then transferred to the Palestinian Authority. These monthly transfers, about $170 million, are a key source of funding for the budget of the authority, which administers parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Israel last year passed a law deducting parts of these transfers, which it said supported militants' families. Sunday's decision was a continuation of that policy.

In February, after Israel withheld $140 million, the Palestinians said they would reject all transfers to protest the Israeli policy. But six months later, with the Palestinian Authority in a deep financial crisis, the conflicting parties worked out a deal to resume most of the transfers.

Read also: Israel prevents hundreds of Gaza's Christians from Bethlehem Christmas pilgrimage despite lifting ban

Palestinian official Hanan Ashrawi denounced the latest Israeli move, calling it a “blatant act of theft and political extortion.”

“This is a clear violation of Palestinian rights and signed agreements as well as a criminal act of collective punishment exacted for cynical domestic Israeli political reasons,” she said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office declined comment.

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