📄 Extracted Text (3,245 words)
From: PMW Special Report
To: jeevacationggmail.com
Subject: Is the PA lying to European governments to receive European funding?
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 12:49:14 +0000
Lel,PMW
Bulletin
Feb. 14, 2013
PMW Special Report
Is the PA lying to European governments
in order to receive European funding?
European and US money donated to the PA's general budget
is paying salaries not only to all Palestinian terrorists in Israeli prisons
but also to 4,000 former security and terrorist prisoners
http:dpalwatch.orgimain.aspx?fi=1578doc id=8550
by Itamar Marcus and Nan Jacques Zilberdik
Palestinian Media Watch has seen statements by both the British and Norwegian
governments defending their payments to the Palestinian Authority's general
budget for salaries. These statements came in response to two PMW reports
documenting that thousands of imprisoned terrorists are among the recipients of
PA salaries. In their statements, both the British and Norwegian governments say
that the PA has informed them that the PA does not pay "salaries" to terrorists in
Israeli prisons, but social "assistance" payments to the prisoners' families.
Minister of State Alan Duncan on behalf of Britain's Department for International
Development (DfID) said: "The second [PA] payment scheme [to prisoners] is
intended to assist families in need of assistance." Both governments have written
that this information was received from the PA. (See statements below.)
PMW has repeatedly rejected this claim and documented that the payments are
indeed salaries not correlated to need but given as a reward for the prisoners'
terror acts, which the PA sees as actions worthy of "esteem." (See below.) It
would violate the letter or spirit of the Western donor countries' laws and certainly
the intent of all Western donors, to have their contributions to the PA go to
terrorists' salaries.
1. PA Minister's statement rejects as "rumor" the information the PA
supplied to the Europeans
The PA has now released a statement through its official news service, WAFA,
explicitly contradicting the information that it supplied to the Europeans, while
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corroborating PMW's documentation. The PA Minister of Prisoners' Affairs, Issa
Karake, announced that the categorization of the prisoners' "salaries" as social
"assistance" was an incorrect "rumor":
"[Minister of Prisoners' Affairs Issa] Karake denies rumors about changing
salaries (Arabic: rawatib) into social assistance (Arabic: i'anat
ijtima'iya)... He noted that the government headed by Salam Fayyad
considers the prisoners' cause central, and has authorized regulations to
support and protect them out of esteem for their sacrifice and struggle."
[WAFA (the official Palestinian Authority news agency), Dec. 27, 2012]
Significantly, the PA's denial of the information it supplied to its international
donors was announced by WAFA, the official Palestinian Authority news agency.
(See full article below.)
Additionally, it should be noted that PA Minister Karake stressed that it is not
merely an issue of language, but of the essence of the payment. Karake
explained that the prisoners are supported "out of esteem for their sacrifice
and struggle," i.e., as a reward for their actions. UK Min. of State Duncan wrote
in his letter on behalf of UK's DfID, that:
"It is true that in some cases, payments will go to families of those who have
committed the sort of crime that we utterly condemn. We believe however
that it would be wrong to punish innocent children and dependent family
members by denying them access to social support."
What is explicit from PA Minister Karake's words is that the payments are not for
the "innocent children," but "out of esteem for their (i.e., the prisoners')
sacrifice and struggle." To the UK and the West, terrorism is a "crime that we
utterly condemn." However, to the PA it is specifically those crimes that are held
in "esteem" and rewarded with monthly salaries.
The PA's payment of salaries in recognition of their acts of terror is consistent
with the PA's policy of glorifying terrorists. (See the 40 page PMW special report
prepared in December 2012 for members of the Dutch Foreign Affairs
Committee, documenting over 100 examples of the PA honoring and glorifying
terrorists including terrorist murderers.)
2. Palestinian terrorist prisoners continue to receive a salary after being
released from prison. Today, 4,000 released prisoners receive a
"permanent" and "full monthly salary."
Palestinian terrorist prisoners who served more than five years in prison remain
on PA's payroll even after being released. 4,000 released prisoners who were
imprisoned for terrorism or other security offenses, now receive "permanent"
"full monthly salaries", even though many are "in the prime of their lives and
could get a job and work." The PA's payment of a full salary to released
prisoners is another example of how the PA rewards terrorists with donor money:
TV interview with PA Minister Karake:
TV host: "You speak of a permanent salary for every [released] prisoner
who was in prison for more than five years, and he gets his salary while he
sits at home. Some of them are in the prime of their lives and could get a
job and work. Why not use him in the workforce and give him a salary?"
Minister Karake: "That's right. I presented it to the government and we
decided to give preference to employ these prisoners... in order to make the
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prisoner into a productive person..."
Host "Do we have the number of P 2i
prisoners who get full monthly salaries?"
Karake: "About 4,000."
Host: "That's an army."
Karake: "Yes, that's a big number, and
it's growing."
Host "They don't work. They just
collect a salary."
Karake: "Some work."
Host "A small number."
Karake: "Some volunteer and work in different institutions."
[Wattan TV, private Palestinian channel, Dec. 29, 2012, emphasis added]
Click to view
3. PA changes language of law from "salary" to "assistance" to satisfy the
UK, but immediately reverts back to original language
An additional indicator that the PA government seems to be intentionally
deceiving its foreign donors is that the UK minister wrote that the PA admitted
that its law originally stated it was paying "salaries" -"ratib." However, in response
to the donors' queries they decided to change the language of the law from
"salaries" - "ratib"- to "assistance" - "la'ana." (See UK DfID letter below.)
Strikingly, this cosmetic change - substituting one word with another - was
accepted as adequate, satisfying both by the UK and Norway.
There are indications that the PA may actually have changed the terminology of
the law from "salary" (ratib) to "assistance" (la'ana) to satisfy the Europeans, but
then immediately changed it back under pressure from prisoners' organizations.
The following statements by Palestinian prisoners' support organizations shed
light on this PA pretense:
Headline: "Fares: The government has given the 'Prisoners and Released
Prisoners Law' final approval."
"Prisoners' Club Chairman Qadura Fares said that the government has given
final approval for what is stipulated in the Prisoners' and Released
[Prisoners'] Law of 2004, which considers payments made to prisoners
'salaries,' (Arabic: ratib) to which no other term applies.
In a statement made to the media, Fares on Thursday [Dec. 27, 2012] called
for an end to the disagreement in this matter, which was settled in
accordance with the law passed by the previous (PA) Parliament in 2004.
The Ahrar Center for Prisoners' and Human Rights Research had demanded
that President Mahmoud Abbas intervene immediately to reverse the
government's decision to replace the term 'prisoner salary' (Arabic:
ratib) with the term 'prisoner assistance (Arabic: i'anat.)
The Ahrar Center had noted that Palestinian laws are explicit, and what a
prisoner receives is not 'assistance' (Arabic: ma'una, from the same root as
i'anat), but rather his minimal rights for the years he spent in prison."
[Al-Quds Internet edition, Dec. 27, 2012, emphasis added]
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Conclusions
After the UK and Norway questioned the PA about its payment of salaries to
terrorists, the PA changed the language of the law of its payments to terrorists
from "salary" to "assistance." This change was made so that these countries
would continue their funding of the PA. Organizations representing the
Palestinian prisoners complained about this cosmetic change in the law, which
was seen as an insult to the prisoners who deserve the payments as a "salary"
and a "right," not as social "assistance". The PA government responded,
according to Prisoners' Club Chairman Qadura Fares, and made a final version
of the law "which considers payments made to prisoners 'salaries,' (Arabic:
ratib) to which no other term applies."
This was all corroborated by the PA Minister of Prisoners' Affairs who said
that even the cosmetic name change to "social assistance" was only a
rumor and that prisoners receive "salaries" out of the PA's "esteem" for
them.
Since 2011, PMW has been informing international donors that aid money given
to the PA for salaries and for the PA's general budget pays the salaries of
Palestinian terrorists imprisoned in Israel. This is in violation of the letter or spirit
of the laws of the funding countries. These salaries are paid to all prisoners,
including those who personally murdered Israelis, like 17 year-old Hakim Awad
who murdered five members of the Fogel family, as well as terrorists like Ibrahim
Hamid, who received 54 life sentences for planning several suicide bombings.
None of these payments have ever been denied by the PA.
Apparently, European funders of the PA have continued to fund the salaries as
well as the general budget because the PA is supplying them with false and only
partial information. The Europeans may not be aware that their donations to the
PA were also paying salaries for 4,000 released prisoners who are able to work.
Likewise, the donors were misinformed by the PA that their payments for salaries
are "social assistance." The words of the Minister of Prisoners' Affairs to the
Palestinian audience in Arabic are explicit: the purpose of the laws regarding the
prisoners and their salary payments is not to give social "assistance" based on
needs, but were enacted "out of esteem" for their actions.
Click to view pdf of this PMW report with previous PMW reports documenting the
PA's payment of salaries to terrorists in prison.
Click to view pdf of PMW's first report exposing the PA's payment of salaries to
terrorists in prison.
Click to view pdf of PMW's first report on UK aid financing the PA's payment of
salaries to terrorists in prison.
Click to view pdf of PMW's second report on UK aid financing the PA's payment
of salaries to terrorists in prison.
Click to view pdf of PMW's report on PA payment of salaries and glorification of
terrorists and Dutch funding.
Appendix: Statements from British and Norwegian governments
about salaries
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1. Statement from British DflD about salaries
Mike Freer MP
House of Commons
London SW1A OAA
16 November 2012
Dear Mike
Thank you for your letter of 5 November, to Justine Greening, Secretary of
State for International Development, red:MF/JW, enclosing an email from
your constituent, Mr. David Lewis, of 37 The Grove, London, N3 1QT, about
DFID.s support to the Palestinian Authority (PA), in the context or recent
allegations by Palestinian Media Watch.
It is completely wrong to suggest that the UK is supporting terrorism. We
have robust safeguards in place to ensure that our funds do not benefit
terrorist groups, and ensure that our partners do the same. We are also
vigorous in investigating allegations which are made. In addition to our own
investigations, we draw on independent reports from neutral groups where
these are available. For example, on the issue of textbooks, independent
studies by Congressional Research Services, UNESCO and others have
come to very different conclusions to those of Palestinian Media Watch,
finding no evidence of incitement or anti-semitism.
Our support to the PA is helping to build the institutions vitally necessary to
lay the groundwork for an effective and viable Palestinian State, living in
peace and security with Israel. UK aid to the PA is also helping to deliver
essential services such as health and education to poor and vulnerable
people in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Our development assistance
to the PA is governed by a Memorandum of Understanding which reaffirms
the PA's commitment to non-violence and a negotiated solution to the
conflict. We continue to assess that President Abbas and Prime Minister
Fayyad are committed to non-violent pursuit of a two state solution. We have
reviewed the allegations made by PMW in their recent report. While we are
continuing to investigate some of the details, our overall assessment is that
their accusations are flawed in many respects.
Firstly, it is important to understand that the Palestinian Authority operates
two schemes in respect of prisoners. The first operates at the request of the
Israeli authorities and is administered by an Israeli company. Under this
agreement PA funds are used to cover the immediate needs of prisoners for
food and clothing. This is in line with basic international law, and indeed we
would normally expect the imprisoning authority to make such provision
itself.
The second payment scheme is intended to assist families in need of
assistance. There are a number of points in the PMW report relating to this
support that are not borne out by the facts, as set out below.
PMW states that the PA's law refers to the payments as "salaries." The
document referred to is a Cabinet Decision, not a law. The word used in the
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decision, "ratib," can be used for any regular payment, not just for salaries.
The PA has now changed the wording in the Cabinet Decision to
unambiguously refer to the payment as assistance - "la'ana." This is
consistent with the PA's published budget which uses the same word for
payments to prisoners families as it does for other social assistance
payments. The payment is also unlike salaries in other ways, for example in
that it cannot be used as a basis for mortgage lending.
(PMW comment: The information reported by the UK regarding the meaning
of the Arabic word "ratib" is incorrect. "Ratib" is the word specifically used for
"salaries." Note the precise definitions in two respected Arabic - English
dictionaries:
"(pl. 1
4/-atm rawatib) salary, pay, emolument;"
(The Hans Wehr Dictionary of Modem Written Arabic]
"Rate') (rawateb) Salary (especially government officials and
professionals). rawateb il-muwazzafin - officials' salaries".
("The Olive Tree dictionary - A Transliterated Dictionary of
Conversational Eastern Arabic (Palestinian)]
PMW also say that the core payments cannot be social assistance because
unmarried prisoners receive the basic payment and there are additional
payments for wives and children. The Cabinet Decision states that "The
spouse of the prisoner is the formal delegate to receive the payment unless
the prisoner decides otherwise. If the prisoner was not married then one of
the parents is delegated and the prisoner may choose one of them or any
other family member."
(PMW comment: In all cases the prisoner is in sole control of the money and
only he has the right to designate the person who will receive the payments
on his behalf while he is in prison. As the PA law states and as quoted
correctly by Duncan: the spouse is "the delegate" who receives the money
"unless the prisoner decides otherwise." It is the prisoner's money and the
prisoner's decision.]
PMW states that the amount of the payment increases with the severity of
the crime rather than the needs of the family. This is not the case. Prisoners
given a long sentence start on the same payment as those serving other
crimes, and families with other sources of public income do not receive the
payment. PMW is correct that the highest payment to families is around
12,000 Shekels, which is around £2000 per month, Only 2 prisoners' families
receive this high amount, and the basic payment received by the majority of
prisoners' families is much lower.
(PMW comment: As reported by PMW previously, it is the PA's official
newspaper Al-Hayat Al-Jadida that in a special financial supplement about
PA salaries wrote that the average salary of prisoners is higher than that PA
civil servants and PA military. (See reports in pdf)]
It is true that in some cases, payments may go to families of those who have
committed the sort of crime that we utterly condemn. We believe, however,
that it would be wrong to punish innocent children and other dependent
family members by denying them access to social support. We have
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discussed these issues with the PA at the highest levels in recent weeks, and
continue to encourage the PA to ensure that these payments are more
transparent, needs-based and affordable. We have offered support to the PA
in doing so.
Providing assistance in the context of an unresolved conflict that has lasted
more than 60 years presents some inevitable challenges. The UK is
committed to resolving this conflict in a peaceful negotiated two state
solution. I am sure this is a goal on which we both can agree.
Alan Duncan
2. Statement from Norwegian Foreign Ministry about salaries
"Dagbladet has asked the government a number of questions regarding Pal
watch's (PMW's) information [on PA paying salaries to imprisoned terrorists],
but the [Norwegian] Foreign Ministry denies these problems and refers to the
salary payments as social benefits. 'The PA has, in the same way other
countries' governments have, a variety of arrangements for social transfers
to its citizens, including people who are imprisoned. Social benefits to the
families of Palestinians in Israeli prisons are part of the total Palestinian
social security system and are intended to compensate for loss of income.
Such social transfers have been made for as long as the PA has existed and
on social grounds, including considerations for children in the family,' writes
Frode Overland Andersen in the Foreign Ministry in an email. That the
prisoners receive a higher average salary than teachers, soldiers and others
who perform key functions in a future Palestinian state, was not commented
on by the Foreign Ministry..."
[Dagbladet.no (Norway), Sept. 4, 2011]
3. Wafa report on PA Minister of Prisoners' Affairs lssa Karake's statement:
Headline: "Karake denies rumors about changing salaries into social
welfare."
"Minister of Prisoners' Affairs Issa Karake denied the stories and
rumors that the [Palestinian] prisoners' (i.e., in Israeli prisons for terror
related crimes) salaries would be changed to social welfare payments.
In a press release Karake clarified that prisoners receive their stipends in
accordance with regulations and the law, and their rights are protected so
that it is impossible to hurt them. He noted that the government headed by
Salam Fayyad considers the prisoners' cause central, and has authorized
regulations to support and protect them out of esteem for their sacrifice
and struggle.
He added that recent years have seen strong government support for
regulations and laws that protect the rights of prisoners and their families, as
[they protect] the rights of Martyred fighters.
Karake said that people should be careful regarding rumors, and not use the
prisoners to promote narrow, personal aims, which caused confusion among
the prisoners."
[WAFA (the official Palestinian Authority news agency), Dec. 27, 2012]
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