The Times of Israel reports:
EU-Israel relations chief cites local corruption, says taxpayers’ money should be more closely monitored.
Citing alleged corruption by Palestinian recipients of aid money, the European Parliament’s Israel relations czar urged more conditionality by EU donor states.
Fulvio Martusciello, the chairman of the
parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Israel, issued the call
during a parliamentary debate Wednesday in Strasbourg on EU funding for
the Middle East, his office wrote in a statement.
“We are talking million-euro projects that see
part of their funds going to individuals who actually shouldn’t receive
a single euro,” Martusciello, an Italian delegate for the center-right
People’s Party bloc, said. “The money comes from EU taxpayers and we
need to exercise tight control on it.”
Martusciello cited a 2013 report by
the European Court of Auditors that found the Palestinians had been
using European money for years to pay employees in the Gaza Strip, some
of whom had not actually worked in seven years. Palestinian Labor Minister Ahmed Majdalani
defended the payments, saying the employees had families to support.
Hamas, which has controlled Gaza since a bloody 2007 coup, has replaced
with its own loyalists, the PA officials receiving the salaries.
The European Parliament in April 2014 adopted a non-binding resolution saying that payroll problems raise concerns about money laundering and terrorist financing. It also noted the Palestinian Authority’s
controversial salary payments to the families of terrorists serving time
in Israeli jails. In an unprecedented move, the parliament also called
for future EU funding to be conditioned on Palestinian compliance with
reform recommendations.
Set up in 1979, the delegation headed by Martusciello is responsible for parliamentary ties with Israel.
According to data discussed at the meeting,
the European Union gives $335 million each year in aid to the
Palestinian Authority, in addition to individual donations by member
states. Since 1994, $7.7 billion in EU funds have been transferred to Ramallah, including for capacity building.
In 2013, EU humanitarian aid to Bangladesh, a
disaster-prone and poor nation with a population of over 155 million,
totaled in at $12.3 million, according to the European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection Department. In 2013, the department provided $37.7 million for humanitarian aid for approximately 6.5 million Palestinians.
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