Lobbying for martyrs’ subsidy to US

epa06101198 A Palestinians man is pushed off the street by an Israeli Border Policewoman as security forces on horseback scatter worshippers amid stun grenades thrown when clashes broke out following a mass Friday prayer on the street near the Old City walls of Jerusalem in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Wadi Jos, 21 July 2017. Israel's security cabinet decided not to dismantle the new security measures at the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Islamic authorities of the al-Aqsa Mosque compound, including the mufti of Jerusalem, called on Palestinian Muslims not to go through the electronic gates installed by the Israeli police and rejected all procedures that change the historic situation of the mosque. Israel authorities installed metal detectors at the entrance to the al-Aqsa compound after a shooting attack carried by Israeli Arab on 14 July against Israeli police at the al-Aqsa compound, killing two Israeli policemen and the three attackers.  EPA/JIM HOLLANDER

Husam Zomlot does not have an easy job. He is the Palestinian Liberation Organization’s representative in Donald Trump’s Washington. And despite Trump’s early promise to seek the ultimate deal to bring peace to the Holy Land, his administration is focused on more pressing matters.
Zomlot’s biggest problem these days is a piece of legislation named for Taylor Force, a former US army officer who was stabbed to death in 2016 when he was in Tel Aviv on tour with his fellow Vanderbilt University graduate students.
When Republican Senator Lindsey Graham learned that the family of the murderer would be receiving a lifetime stipend as part of a Palestinian program to pay the families of so-called martyrs and inmates in Israeli prisons, he drafted legislation to end US all economic assistance to the Palestinian Authority until the payments ended.
The bill is now winding its way through the legislative process and, in some form, will likely end up on the president’s desk. While the Trump administration has yet to take a position on it, Zomlot has had the unlucky task of defending the martyr payments to Congress.
In an interview last week, he gave me his argument for why the Palestinian Authority has budgeted more than $300 million for its next fiscal year to pay the families of terrorists and other prisoners. “This is a program that is used is for the victims of the occupation,” he said. “It’s a program to give the families a dignified life, they are provided for, so they and their kids can lead a different future.”
He said the money goes to pay for laptop computers and college tuition for children who otherwise would be facing a bleak future, and families who may have their homes razed by the Israelis as punishment for spawning a terrorist.
Zomlot says this gives no incentive for terrorism. Indeed, he assured me that some graduates of “the program” include high-ranking Palestinian security officials that have cooperated with the Israel Defense Forces. What’s more, he said, if the Palestinian Authority doesn’t pay the families of prisoners, more radical groups likely will fill the void. All of this raises an obvious question. If the Palestinian Authority wants to give poor children laptops and college tuition, why not just do that? Why create a special allowance for only the children and families of Palestinians who kill Jews?
And here Zomlot gets to the heart of the matter. “Many of the U.S. officials and lawmakers judge us as if we are in a post-conflict scenario, as we have to behave like a social welfare state, we are not,” he told me. “This is a conflict situation.”
Indeed it is. One needs no further proof of this than the clashes in the last two weeks over Israeli security measures at the Temple Mount in Jerusalem after three Israeli Arabs launched a shooting spree from the compound that hosts the Al Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam.
Add to this the occupation itself. Palestinians living in the West Bank accused of crimes are given Israeli military trials and almost always convicted. Many of those prisoners have committed ghoulish acts, but many have not, Zomlot said. In this respect, he believes Congress should increase the aid it doles out to the Palestinian Authority, because despite all of this, the Palestinian security forces have helped keep order in the West Bank.

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