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Canada confirms it will resume funding UN relief agency for Palestinians

The Canadian government has confirmed it will restore funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees. The government suspended funding in January after Israel alleged 12 employees of the agency were involved in the October 7 attack on Israel by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

Canada suspended funding to the aid agency after Israel claimed employees were involved in Oct. 7 attack.

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The Canadian government has confirmed it will restore funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees.

International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen confirmed the move at a press conference Friday in Mississauga, Ont.

Canada suspended funding to UNRWA in January after Israel alleged 12 employees of the aid agency were involved in some capacity in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

CBC News first reported on Tuesday that the government intended to resume funding after Ottawa received an interim report from the United Nations investigation of Israel’s allegations.

A senior government official said that, based on the information in that interim report, the federal government was comfortable with resuming funding.

CBC News is not naming the source because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the decision.

“Canada has reviewed the interim report of the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) on this matter and looks forward to the final report,” says a press release accompanying the announcement.

“While these investigative processes continue, UNRWA has taken immediate measures to strengthen oversight, accountability and transparency.

“UNRWA plays a vital role in Gaza, providing over 2 million people with humanitarian relief, in addition to its crucial operations supporting 4 million people elsewhere in the region.”

UNRWA is the ‘backbone’ of aid for Palestinians in Gaza, Hussen says

International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen says Canada is resuming funding to UNRWA because the agency is the ‘backbone’ of the humanitarian response for Palestinian civilians in Gaza — but the agency’s work to address concerns about its practices and credibility is ongoing.

Hussen told reporters that Canada is resuming funding to UNRWA in part because of the dire situation on the ground.

“Lives are at stake and this support simply cannot wait,” said Hussen. “UNRWA forms the backbone of the humanitarian response in Gaza and in the region.

“We have been reassured by the contents of this interim report, but in addition to that, we’ve been reassured by the number of processes and steps that UNRWA itself has undertaken, as well as reforms introduced through the leadership of the UN secretary general.”

After Israel alleged 12 UNRWA employees were involved in the Oct. 7 attack, the relief agency fired 10 of the accused employees. The two other accused employees were later confirmed dead, UNRWA said.

In addition to lifting the suspension on funding to UNRWA, the federal government is providing $100,000 in funding to a charity in Jordan for the purchase of supplies which will be delivered to Gazans, in part through Jordanian airdrops.

The Canadian Armed Forces also will be providing the Jordanian air force with approximately 300 cargo parachutes to replenish their supplies for humanitarian aid airdrops.

A draft version of the news release for Friday’s announcement, shared with CBC News, said that the donated parachutes “are entering the end of their lifecycle and that would otherwise be destroyed. However, they are still suitable for the purpose of dropping cargo.”

That information was not included in the news release published by Hussen’s office.

Not funding UNRWA a ‘disservice’ given Gaza’s current situation: Canada’s UN ambassador

Canada has announced it is restoring funding for UNRWA. That funding was frozen in January following Israel’s allegations that some of UNRWA’s staff were involved in the Oct. 7 Hamas attack. Canada’s Ambassador to the United Nations Bob Rae explains what led to this decision.

In a social media post Friday, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was flip-flopping on UNRWA funding.

“Trudeau ‘paused’ UNRWA funding because of ties to terrorists and revelations that their employees took part in the October 7th attacks,” wrote Poilievre. “A month later he flip-flops.

“His next step: he will send out his MPs from Jewish ridings to criticize the latest decision so that Liberals can be all things to all people.”

Canada’s Ambassador to the United Nations Bob Rae echoed Hussen’s explanation for the resumption of Canadian funding to UNRWA in an interview with CBC Radio’s The House airing Saturday.

Host Catherine Cullen asked Rae if this decision by Canada to restore funding should be interpreted as an exoneration of UNRWA. “Not at all,” Rae said.

“There’s only been a partial report from the first investigation and that investigation has not yet had the opportunity to meet with the Government of Israel,” he said. “The secretary general wrote to the government of Israel at the end of January asking for full cooperation with this UN investigation team and, to this point, the Israeli government has not shared any detailed information with respect to the original allegations of the 12 employees.

“We decided that this is taking a very long time. We can’t wait now because of the situation on the ground. Children are starving. People are dying. There is not enough food getting in. That must be the priority for everybody, including Israel.”

Israel insists UNRWA must be replaced as Canada appears poised to resume funding

“UNRWA has basically manipulated and monopolized all of the assistance that goes into Gaza,” Israel’s Ambassador to Canada Iddo Moed tells Power & Politics, claiming that the UN relief agency for Palestinians is “fully oriented” toward the goals of Hamas.

The United Nations says approximately 500,000 Palestinians in Gaza are facing catastrophic levels of food insecurity. An estimated 1.7 million Palestinians are internally displaced within the besieged enclave.

Israel insists that UNRWA must be replaced as the primary aid agency for Palestinians. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed last month that the relief agency has been “totally infiltrated” by Hamas.

Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, Israel’s chief military spokesperson, escalated accusations against UNRWA on Monday, claiming at a press conference that 450 of the agency’s employees were members of militant groups in Gaza. Hagari did not provide names or other evidence to support the claim.

On Tuesday, the relief agency’s Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini accused Israel on the floor of the UN General Assembly of conducting a “deliberate and concerted campaign to undermine [UNRWA’s] operations and ultimately end them.”

UNRWA says it employs more than 30,000 employees in total, 13,000 of whom are in Gaza.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Brennan MacDonald is a producer for CBC’s national television program Power & Politics and a writer for CBC’s Parliament Hill bureau.

With files from Catherine Cullen and The Associated Press

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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