Israel makes cut in Palestinian tax money
JERUSALEM: Israeli ministers on Sunday kept in place a partial freeze on tax revenues it collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority over its financial support for militants, an official said.
The sum withheld, around 600 million shekels ($176 million), would balance the amount the PA paid to assailants’ families last year, under legislation dating back to 2018.
Israel collects around $190 million a month in customs duties levied on goods destined for Palestinian markets that transit through Israeli ports, and it transfers the funds to the PA. When Israel began implementing the law in 2019, the Palestinians in protest refused to receive all funds for eight months. Israel alleges the payments to families of those who carried out attacks encourage further violence.
The PA, for its part, says the payments are a form of welfare to families who lost their main breadwinner.
An Israeli official said the ministers in Israel’s so-called “security cabinet” approved keeping the freeze in place. The move prompted senior PA official Hussein Al Sheikh to accuse Israel of “money piracy”.
Israel’s “policy of financial blockade and steal(-ing) our money” would add “to the daily escalation in our cities, villages and camps”, he tweeted.
Published in Dawn, August 1st, 2022