Fresh EU aid announced to “help pay for Palestinian civil servants”

Martin Banks

Belgium (Brussels Morning Newspaper) The European Commission has agreed to a second tranche of €25 million in assistance for the Palestinian Authority, which will help cover salaries and pensions for civil servants in the West Bank. This payment is part of the larger €118.4 million assistance package adopted in December 2023. Additionally, the Commission disbursed €16 million to UNRWA to provide essential services such as health and education to Palestinian refugees. The EU’s assistance aims to support the economic viability and social rights of Palestinians, with a focus on promoting democratic and accountable governance.

The European Commission has approved a second tranche of €25 million in assistance to the Palestinian Authority, aimed at supporting the payment of salaries and pensions for Palestinian civil servants. This funding is part of the €118.4 million assistance package adopted in December 2023. The Commission also allocated €16 million to UNRWA for essential services to Palestinian refugees.

EU Approves Second €25 Million Aid Payment to Palestinian Authority

The European Commission has agreed to a second tranche of assistance of €25 million for the Palestinian Authority. It says this will contribute to the payment of salaries and pensions of Palestinian civil servants and disbursed €16 million for UNRWA to provide basic services such as health and education to Palestinian refugees.   The €25 million payment under PEGASE will, says the EC, help the Palestinian Authority to meet part of its commitments towards Palestinian civil servants in the West Bank.

“At this critical juncture, it will provide a much-needed contribution to the significant challenges facing the Palestinian economy, in particular before Eid al-Adha,” said an EC spokesman. The payment, announced late on Fridy, is the second tranche disbursed to the Palestinian Authority as part of the €118.4 million assistance package adopted in December 2023. The first €25 million payment were disbursed in March.

The spokesman added, “The payment of the second tranche has been also carried out in conformity with the conclusions of the review of EU financial assistance to Palestine after the tragic events on 7 October 2023, including the extended screening of the beneficiaries.”

Aid to Palestinian Authority for Salaries and Pensions

The EC says the latest EU assistance will contribute to the payments of the salaries and pensions of civil servants in the West Bank, the social allowances for vulnerable families through the Cash Transfer Programme in the West Bank and Gaza, the payment for the medical referrals to the East Jerusalem Hospitals and support the administrative and technical capacity of the Palestinian Authority institutions.

The Commission has also processed the payment corresponding to the second tranche of €16 million. This new payment to UNRWA brings to €66 million the EU’s total development assistance out of the €82 million for the UN Agency in 2024. The European Union is the biggest provider of external assistance to the Palestinians which amounts to almost €1.2 billion for 2021-2024 under the European Joint Strategy, of which €809.4 million have already been adopted.

The  spokesman said, “The PEGASE programme aims to contribute to a democratic, accountable, economically viable Palestinian state as well as the fulfilment of social rights. PEGASE provides for robust ex ante and ex post screening of beneficiaries carried out by an independent audit company.” He added, “The EU is already reflecting on a more mid-term package to support the Palestinians and the reform agenda of the new Palestinian Government, with the aim of contributing to lay the ground for economic and political stability of Gaza and the West Bank, in cooperation with the international community, once conditions allow on the ground.”

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Martin Banks is an experienced British-born journalist who has been covering the EU beat (and much else besides) in Brussels since 2001. Previously, he had worked for many years in regional journalism in the UK and freelanced for national titles. He has a keen interest in foreign affairs and has closely followed the workings of the European Parliament and MEPs in particular for some years.
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