This letter appears in the Daily Telegraph today, 30 October 2024
Sir
The services that the UN
Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) supplies in Gaza are
undoubtedly vital, but they should not be provided by UNRWA, a deeply
compromised organization (“UNRWA banned from operating within Israel”, report, October
29).
Around the time the state
of Israel came into being, some 750,000 non-Jews left their homes – some from
fear of forthcoming conflict, some as a result of fierce exchanges. After the armistice, the UN set up UNRWA to
assist them. It began work in May 1950. Seven months later
the UN set up the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
excluding Palestinian refugees from its remit. Ever since, Palestinians
have been treated differently by the UN – to their disadvantage.
The 1949 UN resolution
that established UNRWA said: “Constructive measures should be
undertaken at an early date with a view to the termination of international
assistance for relief.” In other words, the new agency’s mission was
intended to be temporary, as the refugees under its wing were resettled. But resettlement never occurred. UNRWA
totally ignored this key aspect of its remit.
On the contrary, UNRWA’s policy
was to perpetuate the Palestinians’ refugee status. It decided to regard
as refugees all the “descendants of Palestine refugees” in perpetuity.
The number of
Palestinians in camps registered by UNRWA as refugees has therefore ballooned from
around 750,000 in 1950 to 5.9 million in 2023.
Its expanding client base is, of course, used by the “temporary” UNRWA
to justify its transformation into an international bureaucracy with a staff in
excess of 30,000 and an annual budget of around $1.6 billion.
While UNHCR concentrates on
resettling refugees so they can rebuild their lives, UNRWA has converted nearly six million people into permanent charity-dependent clients.
UNRWA should be dissolved, and its functions
absorbed by UNHCR
Neville Teller
Published in the Daily Telegraph, 30 October 2024, titled: "The UN in Gaza":
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/2024/10/29/experience-shows-nhs-cant-be-trusted-use-funds-efficiently/
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