The sequence is difficult for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees: after having had to dismiss several of its employees accused of being involved in the Hamas attack on October 7, UNRWA is deprived of its American funding .

On Friday, the United Nations agency, at the heart of distributing aid to civilians in the Gaza Strip and under the fire of fighting between Israel and Hamas, announced that it had received information from Israel on “the supposed involvement of several of its employees” in the attack.

“To protect the agency's ability to deliver humanitarian aid, I have decided to immediately terminate the contracts of these staff members and open an investigation,” the head of the agency said in a statement. , Philippe Lazzarini. “Any employee who has been involved in acts of terrorism will be held accountable, including through legal action.”

A few minutes later, a scathing response came from Washington, indicating that it would "temporarily" suspend any additional funding to the UN agency.

The United States "is extremely concerned by accusations that 12 UNRWA employees may have been involved in the attack," State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement.

The head of American diplomacy, Antony Blinken, spoke with the Secretary General of the UN, Antonio Guterres, in order to “underline the need for a rapid and thorough investigation into this matter”.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry, for its part, demanded a “deep internal examination of the activities of Hamas and other terrorist organizations” within UNRWA.

Hard blow for the agency

The blow is hard for the agency, regularly accused by Israel of corruption and collusion with Hamas, which it systematically defends.

The United States, the main contributor, had already withdrawn its funding under the Trump administration, which deemed its activities “irreparably biased”. The arrival of Joe Biden offered him a breath of fresh air, with the restoration announced in 2021 of aid of 340 million dollars.

Relations between Israel and UNRWA had further deteriorated in recent days, when the UN accused two Israeli tanks of firing on an UNRWA training center in Khan Younes, in the south of the Strip, on Wednesday. from Gaza.

Transformed into a shelter since the start of the war, it accommodates tens of thousands of displaced people. Thirteen people were killed and more than 56 injured, including 21 in critical condition in these strikes, according to the agency.

Philippe Lazzarini denounced a “flagrant violation of the fundamental rules of war”. The Israeli army, for its part, announced a "thorough review" of its operations in the area concerned, without ruling out the possibility of a Hamas strike. The Israeli army is the only force in the Gaza Strip to deploy tanks.

The UN also claimed that the Israeli army had ordered the evacuation of the refuge by 5 p.m. local time this Friday, which the army denied. At the same time, it published orders on social networks to evacuate certain areas of Khan Younes, where telecommunications are limited and where fighting has intensified in recent days.

The AFP was unable to travel near the UN building to assess the situation.

On Friday, UNRWA insisted that "more than 2 million people in Gaza depend on vital aid that the agency has provided since the war began" and that "anyone who betrays the fundamental values ​​of the United Nations also betrays those we serve in Gaza, the region and elsewhere in the world."

With AFP

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