On Sept. 7,
Agence France-Presse released an article entitled 'Most Palestinians live in poverty, on two
dollars a day.' Why are most
Palestinians so tragically poor? The AFP reporter turns
to a U.N. representative who blames Palestinian poverty on four sources:
Israel's blockade of the territories, destruction of assets [in Palestinian
areas], expansion of Jewish settlements and the separation barrier.
Israel is thereby accused of complete responsibility for the unfortunate state
of the Palestinian economy. The AFP report provides no dissenting
voices, and Israel is not granted the right of response to any one of these
serious allegations.
This article is not merely anti-Israel ― it's sloppy journalism at its worst.
AFP fails to acknowledge the mounds of evidence that while Israeli
anti-terror policies have created some hardships, the primary reason for
Palestinian poverty is irresponsible Palestinian leadership, whose embezzlement,
diversion of funds to terror, and failure to invest in infrastructure have
left the average Palestinian destitute.
HonestReporting encourages subscribers to write to AFP (contact@afp.com),
using the documentation below.
MASSIVE AID DIVERTED TO TERRORISTS
Since the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, the
international community has shown unprecedented generosity toward
Palestinians, donating approximately
$5 billion to the Palestinian Authority.
The World Bank noted recently that 'donor disbursements to the Palestinians
currently amount to approximately $1 billion per year or $310 per person ― one
of the highest per capita rates in the history of foreign assistance.' (By
comparison, the
Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe after World War II provided $68 per year, in
today's dollars, to Europeans.)
So where's all the money going? A recent,
in-depth study from the
independent
Funding for Peace Coalition (FPC) found overwhelming evidence that 'European
aid has not reached its intended target ― the Palestinian people. It has been
diverted towards graft, terrorism and incitement to hatred.'
While direct PA payments to terror gangs (with
Yassir Arafat's own signature as authorization) have been
documented
since 2002, the FPC continues to find a 'compelling connection' between EU
aid and funding of Palestinian terror. Just one point of evidence cited by the
FPC: An interview with PA officials and Fatah leaders on the
BBC in
November 2003 revealed that the PA had reimbursed $50,000 of monthly expenses to
one of the deadliest terror groups, the Al-Aksa Martyrs' Brigades.
So the EU, now the single largest donor to the PA,
literally contributes to keeping bands of terrorists on the PA payroll. Precious funds intended to ease Palestinian poverty
are used instead for suicide bombs targeting Israeli civilians.
ARAFAT'S CORRUPTION
But checks to terrorists are small change compared to Yassir Arafat's record of
personal theft. Over the course of his 'revolutionary'
career, Arafat has siphoned off
hundreds of millions of dollars of international aid money intended to reach the
Palestinian people.
Estimates of the degree of Arafat's wealth differ, but are
all staggering. Last year,
Forbes
magazine listed Arafat in its annual list of the wealthiest 'Kings, Queens and
Despots,' with a fortune of 'at least $300 million.'
Israeli and
US officials estimate Arafat's personal holdings between $1-3
billion. Rachel Ehrenfeld,
Director of the American Center for Democracy,
arrives at a figure of $1.3 billion and laments:
This money is enough to a) feed 3 million Palestinians for 1 year, b) buy 1,000
mobile intensive care units, c) fund 10 hospitals for a decade, and d) would
still leave $585 million to fund other social projects.
And while the average Palestinian barely subsists, Arafat's wife Suha (at
left) in Paris
receives $100,000 a month from PA sources, as reported on
CBS' 60 Minutes. That CBS report also noted that Arafat maintains secret
investments in a Ramallah-based Coca Cola plant, a Tunisian cellphone company,
and venture capital funds in the U.S. and the Cayman Islands.
Arafat also uses foreign aid funds to pay off cronies who bolster his autocracy: A
recent
International Monetary Fund report indicates that
upwards of 8% ($135 million) of the PA's
annual budget is handed out by Arafat 'at his sole discretion.' The 2003 budget
for Arafat's office, which totaled $734 million, was missing $34 million that
Arafat had transferred to pay unidentified 'organizations' and 'individuals.'
And Ehrenfeld notes that this IMF report 'did not take into account Arafat's
control of 60 percent of the security apparatus budget, which leaves him with at
least an additional $360 million per year to spend as he chooses.'
FAILURE TO INVEST IN INFRASTRUCTURE
Bringing the Palestinian people out of poverty would require building an
infrastructure
that
is no longer utterly dependent on foreign aid and jobs in Israel. But almost
none of the PA budget has been directed to this end.
The situation is best summarized by Mohammad Dahlan, former PA Interior
Minister, who recently told
The Guardian
that of all the funds donated to the Palestinian Authority, a total of $5
billion 'have gone down the drain, and we don't know to
where.'
Education is one key to building a robust
Palestinian economy. But Palestinian schools and universities are infested with
terrorist ideology and incitement.
This was the scene
(at right) at
a West Bank university's back-to-school day, earlier this week ― huge portraits
of terrorist 'heros' hovered over students perusing new schoolbooks.
Why doesn't the PA allow foreign aid to promote a sustainable
Palestinian future by removing such incitement and educating toward
peace?
Other highly symbolic episodes: When an
American convoy traveled to Gaza last year to interview potential
Palestinian Fulbright scholars, it was blown up by local terrorists.
And as documented by
Palestinian Media Watch, $500,000 of USAid funds was used
recently to build 'Martyr Salakh Khalaf Stadium.' Salakh Khalaf, better known
as Abu Iyad, was head of the Black September terrorist organization,
and was responsible for the murder of two American diplomats in Sudan
in 1973, and the murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics
in 1972.
* * *
Yet Agence France-Presse ignores all of these points,
relying instead on one dubious source to blame Palestinian poverty solely upon
Israeli strictures. In truth, the primary reason for Palestinian poverty is
the criminal failure of the Palestinian leadership to serve its own
constituency ― despite massive international aid intended to promote
precisely that goal.
Comments to AFP:
contact@afp.com Thank you for your ongoing involvement in the battle against media
bias.
HonestReporting