Israeli PM backs Trump critique of Palestinian UN aid agency

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that he "completely agrees" with President Donald Trump's critique of the UN agency aiding Palestinian refugees, saying that UNRWA only perpetuates the problem and should cease from operating in the region.

Speaking at his weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu also reiterated his support for Trump's threat to cut aid to the Palestinians. The remarks came after Israeli media reports indicated that despite its public declarations, Israel was actually concerned about the ramifications of such a move.

Critics say an aid cut could lead to a humanitarian crisis and that in the absence of UNRWA, Israel, as an occupying nation, could get stuck with the bill for providing services to Palestinians. A collapse in UNRWA could also open the way for the Hamas militant group to gain influence.

Netanyahu suggested UNRWA's budget should be transferred to the more far-reaching United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, where it would be allocated to those truly in need.

"UNRWA is an organisation that perpetuates the Palestinian refugee problem. It also perpetuates the right of return narrative in order to eliminate the state of Israel. Therefore UNRWA must become a thing of the past," he said.

Netanyahu voiced a common Israeli criticism that UNRWA was created specifically for the Palestinians, while the UNHCR deals with the rest of the world's refugees.

"This of course creates a situation where great-grandchildren of refugees who are not refugees are treated as such by UNRWA. And 70 more years will pass and they will have great-grandchildren, so this absurdity must be stopped," he said.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians either fled or were forced from their homes during the war that surrounded Israel's establishment in 1948. Today, there are an estimated 5 million refugees and their descendants, most scattered across the region in Jordan, Lebanon, the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Trump, along with his UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, has been railing against aid to the Palestinians as part of the fallout of his recognition last month of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The Palestinians have strongly protested the decision, and Trump has threatened to take action against those who challenged him.

The United States, which provides hundreds of millions of dollars a year for the Palestinians, could inflict great pain on the Palestinians by cutting off aid.

Yet it could also have a negative effect on Israel, which also relies on the Palestinian Authority to help maintain calm. Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem – areas claimed by the Palestinians for a future state – in the 1967 Middle East war.

The US is the largest donor to UNRWA and ending its aid could have a particularly damaging effect in Gaza, where the majority of residents are eligible for its services. Critics have warned that thousands of children could turn to Hamas schools, for example, if UNRWA schools are forced to close. (AP)

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