UNRWA distributes aid to displaced people in Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip (Anatolia)

The United Nations announced that Israel has not yet submitted to it a file containing its accusations against the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), and while Washington said that suspending its funding for the agency is temporary, UN agencies warned of the catastrophic consequences of stopping the agency’s funding for the residents of the Gaza Strip.

Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for the United Nations Secretary-General, said in a press conference in New York on Tuesday that Israel had conveyed to UNRWA its allegations of the involvement of 12 agency employees in the attack launched by the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) on October 7, which the movement called a flood. Al-Aqsa.

Dujarric added that Tel Aviv has not yet submitted a written file regarding these allegations, noting that the termination of the duties of the concerned employees and the investigation conducted by the agency took place in light of the Israeli accusations.

The UN spokesman stated that UNRWA previously shared its staff list with the host country, and also shared it with Israel, without the latter expressing any concerns about it.

For days, the Israeli war government has launched a campaign against the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees, and claims that Hamas is using the agency’s infrastructure to launch attacks.

Although investigations into the Israeli allegations are still in their infancy, the United States, other Western countries, and Japan announced the suspension of their aid to UNRWA, and in return, Spain, Ireland, and Norway confirmed that they will not cut aid.

The United Nations agency announced measures that include dismissing the employees concerned and opening an investigation into the Israeli allegations, and warned that cutting its funding would affect Palestinian civilians.

In Gaza...a mass siege that amounts to a crime against humanity, with no drinking water, no health facilities, and food is scarce, and countries that oppress the Palestinians stop funding UNRWA in line with the Israeli campaign | Report: Fatima Al-Triki #News #Gaza_War pic.twitter.com/V7fMsngAAV

- Al Jazeera Channel (@AJArabic) January 30, 2024

Disastrous consequences

Meanwhile, the heads of the UN Inter-Agency Committee said that decisions to stop funding the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees would have catastrophic consequences for the residents of Gaza.

The UN officials added - in a statement - that withdrawing funds from UNRWA will lead to the collapse of the humanitarian system in Gaza.

For her part, the United Nations Aid Coordinator in Gaza, Sigrid Cass, said yesterday that no organization can replace UNRWA.

Cass's statements came as United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres prepared to meet with donor countries.

The United Nations rapporteur on poverty and human rights also expressed his hope that the countries that suspended support for UNRWA would retract their positions, noting that people in Gaza need the support provided by the agency.

Amnesty International called on countries that decided to suspend their funding to the UN agency to retract this decision, which it considers unjust.

Temporary suspension

Meanwhile, the US representative to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said that the cessation of US funding to UNRWA is temporary, stressing the importance of the agency to provide life-saving aid in Gaza.

Greenfield welcomed the United Nations investigation into allegations regarding the participation of agency employees in the attacks of last October 7.

For his part, US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller yesterday called on the United Nations to investigate the allegations against the UN agency, stressing that the agency’s work in Gaza is indispensable and must continue.

Displaced people in an UNRWA school in Rafah (European)

Israeli accusations

In this context, Israel accused the UN agency yesterday of being a “front” for Hamas.

Israeli government spokesman Elon Levy said that UNRWA "is compromised in three main ways: recruiting terrorists on a large scale, allowing Hamas to use its infrastructure for military activities, and relying on Hamas to distribute aid in the Gaza Strip."

For his part, Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid sent a letter to one of the subcommittees of the US Congress in which he echoed the Netanyahu government’s allegations about the UN agency’s support for what he called terrorism by allowing the use of its facilities by the Hamas movement and the involvement of a number of its employees in attacks against Israel.

Lapid called for finding an alternative to UNRWA, saying that it is part of the problem and cannot be part of the solution.

Israeli ministers called for the expulsion of UNRWA employees from the Gaza Strip.

Increase aid

Meanwhile, the UN Security Council yesterday expressed its concern about the dangerous and rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip.

The Council stressed - in a statement - the urgent need to expand the flow of humanitarian aid to civilians in the Gaza Strip.

The Security Council urged all parties to work with the United Nations Coordinator for Humanitarian and Reconstruction Affairs on Gaza.

Source: Al Jazeera + agencies