Tánaiste welcomes EU decision to continue UNRWA funding

More than a dozen countries previously suspended funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees
Tánaiste welcomes EU decision to continue UNRWA funding

Cillian Sherlock, PA

Tánaiste Micheál Martin has welcomed the European Commission’s decision to release funding to the UN’s Palestinian aid agency.

The commission said on Friday that it would proceed with paying €50 million of its €82 million envelope towards the agency next week, and increase emergency support to Palestinians by €68 million this year by funding other organisations.

It also allocated €125 million of humanitarian aid for Palestinians this year and contracted the first €16 million of this package on Friday.

 

More than a dozen countries suspended funding for UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees) after allegations that 12 of its 13,000 Gaza staff members participated in the October 7th Hamas attacks.

The commission had originally been due to give €82 million to UNRWA on Thursday but wanted the agency to accept its terms for an audit.

The aid organisation has told the commission that it agreed to the launch of an audit to be conducted by EU-appointed external experts.

The Government, which provided €20 million in core funding to UNRWA last month, had repeatedly called for other states to continue financially supporting the agency.

 

On Friday, Mr Martin welcomed the commission’s continuation of funding which he described as “urgently needed” by the Palestinian people.

In a statement, Mr Martin said: “After four-and-a-half months of relentless violence and displacement, civilians in Gaza are living in conditions that no human being should have to endure.

“Against this backdrop, the role and mandate of UNRWA is more important than ever. It is the backbone of the humanitarian response in Gaza.

“It is clear that UNRWA is the one organisation that has the bandwidth and capacity to provide services and distribute aid comprehensively across Gaza and the wider region.”

 

The Minister for Foreign Affairs said he welcomed engagement between the UN and the commission on investigating the allegations against UNRWA staff.

He said it was essential that all UN member states co-operated in full with the investigation and the review.

Mr Martin added: “This is a critical moment – for desperate civilians in Gaza, and for the stability of the wider region.

“The international community needs to step up now to support UNRWA, so it can fulfil its vital and life-saving mandate.”

more Politics articles

The Open 2025 - Day One - Royal Portrush Leaders call for zero-tolerance approach to racist and sectarian attacks in NI
US import tariffs Harris says it is time to break ‘dignified silence’ on threats to politicians
Good Friday Agreement 25th Anniversary Claims NI peace deal stops UK leaving ECHR ‘entirely groundless’ – think tank

More in this section

Conor McGregor court case McGregor co-defendant James Lawrence sues Nikita Hand in the High Court
Ashling Murphy death Man (27) charged with assaulting garda during drug search
British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference New Troubles legacy framework ‘effectively there’, says Harris

Sponsored Content

Dell Technologies Forum to empower Irish organisations harness AI innovation this September Dell Technologies Forum to empower Irish organisations harness AI innovation this September
The New Levl Fitness Studio - Now open at Douglas Court The New Levl Fitness Studio - Now open at Douglas Court
World-class fertility care is available in Cork at the Sims IVF World-class fertility care is available in Cork at the Sims IVF
Contact Us Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited

Add Echolive.ie to your home screen - easy access to Cork news, views, sport and more