The Jerusalem Post

Israel returning money deducted to stop Palestinia­n terrorists’ salaries

PA paid NIS 517.4m. on wages in 2019, NIS 15m. more than previous year

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

Israel plans to effectivel­y return the tax and tariff funds deducted due to the Palestinia­n Authority’s continued monthly payments to terrorists and their salaries, in the form of a NIS 800 million loan on Sunday.

A spokeswoma­n for Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon confirmed on Friday that he will sign an agreement with his Palestinia­n counterpar­t on Sunday.

A report in Israel Hayom cited court documents in which Kahlon stated that, with approval from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and in coordinati­on with Defense

Minister Naftali Bennett and National Security Council chief Meir Ben-Shabbat, Israel will grant the loan over the coming months. The loan is essentiall­y an advance on tax funds Israel collects and transfers to the PA under the terms of the Oslo Accords.

The loan is meant to help the PA overcome its current economic crisis, which was deepened due to what has been nicknamed the “Pay for Slay Law” that went into effect at the start of 2019, by which Israel deducts the funds the Palestinia­n Authority pays terrorists and their families each month from their taxes and tariffs.

Since the law went into effect, Israel has deducted over NIS 700m., all of which and more will be returned in the form of the loan.

The PA paid NIS 517.4m. on these salaries in 2019, an increase of more than NIS 15m. from the previous year.

A February poll of Palestinia­ns in the West Bank, conducted by the Washington Institute, found that 68% of them agree with the following statement: “The PA should stop special payments to prisoners and give

prisoners’ families normal social benefits like everybody else, not extra payments based on their sentences or armed operations.” Last year, only 43% agreed; the shift could be due to the PA slashing its workers’ salaries while keeping the full terrorist payments intact.

In Gaza, where Hamas, not the PA, has control, only 37% agree with the statement; 50% agreed last year.

Head of legal strategies at Palestinia­n Media Watch Maurice Hirsch, who has long tracked the PA’s payments to terrorists, said “the ‘loan’ is shameful on multiple levels.”

First, he said, it undermines the law deducting funds paid to terrorists, because Israel is giving the PA more funds than it deducted and never officially decided to implement the law in 2019.

“The ‘loan’ appears to have been given [with] no strings attached,” Hirsch explained. “In other words, the PA can now use Israeli taxpayer money, the money of victims of Palestinia­n terror, to reward the very same terrorists who murdered Israelis.”

Hirsch speculated that “the PA will undoubtedl­y also use the money to continue funding and promoting the investigat­ion of Israel in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. Israel is now funding the campaign against itself!”

In addition, Hirsch said the loan “completely ignores the virulent PA incitement against Israel and Jews, with the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic.”

The court documents in which the Finance Ministry revealed the details of the loan were the state’s response to a petition to the High Court, an organizati­on of bereaved families and victims of terror, demanding the government stop aiding the PA.

“We are funding the murderers of our children,” Herzl and Merav Hajaj of Choosing Life, whose daughter, Shir, was murdered in a terrorist attack, said when they submitted the petition. “We invite the government to directly pay the money to the family of the murderer of our daughter and three other IDF officers.”

Last month, Kahlon first agreed to loan the PA money and transferre­d NIS 120m. of tax funds as emergency aid to the PA, on the advice of IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi who expressed concerns about Israel’s security if the PA collapses.

Kahlon also agreed at the time to ensure that tax and tariff revenue transferre­d to the Palestinia­n Authority will not fall under $137m. per month, which is “the minimum amount necessary to ensure the PA’s fiscal viability and critical service delivery to the Palestinia­ns,” according to UN Special Coordinato­r for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov.

In addition, Israel has aided the Palestinia­ns in fighting the spread of coronaviru­s, by training profession­als from the West Bank and Gaza, and providing medical equipment. •

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? MOSHE KAHLON
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) MOSHE KAHLON
 ?? (Mohamad Torokman/Reuters) ?? A PALESTINIA­N MAN walks out of the Cairo Amman Bank as a burnt part of the bank’s exterior is seen yesterday in Jericho.
(Mohamad Torokman/Reuters) A PALESTINIA­N MAN walks out of the Cairo Amman Bank as a burnt part of the bank’s exterior is seen yesterday in Jericho.

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