US delays $125mn payment for Palestinians after Trump tweet

epa06374039 Palestinian children at UNRWA school carry a small statue of Al-Aqsa Mosque after finish their school  in the Bourj Al-Barajneh Palestinian Refugee Camp in Beirut, Lebanon, 07 December 2017. US president Donald J. Trump on 06 December announced he is recognising Jerusalem as the Israeli capital and will relocate the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.  EPA-EFE/NABIL MOUNZER

Bloomberg

The US has delayed paying about $125 million to the United Nations agency that serves Palestinian refugees, said two people familiar with the matter, after President Donald Trump vented his frustration about getting no “respect” or help in the peace process despite American funding.
The US, by far the biggest contributor to the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) had been expected to deliver the payment on January 2. But Secretary of State Rex Tillerson put a hold on the funds while the administration reviews its next steps, said one of the people, who asked not to
be identified discussing private deliberations.
The delay could be purely symbolic, since the US has a few more weeks before it must make the payment. But the delay is a break from past practice, when such funds were delivered promptly at the start of the year.
Trump tweeted on January 2 that the US pays the Palestinians “HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year” and gets “no appreciation or respect” in return. Nikki Haley, the US Ambassador to the UN, later told reporters the administration would cut off aid if the Palestinians refused to take part in peace talks with Israel.
Haley and the administration were also angered by action at the UN General Assembly in December, in which member states voted 128-9 to condemn Trump’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and move the US embassy there from Tel Aviv.
Most nations view the status of Jerusalem, parts of which are claimed by the Palestinians, as an issue to be determined in final peace negotiations. Palestinians officials said Trump’s move
disqualified the US from being a mediator in any Israel-Palestinian negotiations.
Trump’s threat against UNRWA funding was popular in Israel, even though government security officials warned that it could fuel violence and strengthen radical Palestinian forces in the West Bank, said Jonathan Rynhold, director of Bar Ilan University’s Argov Center for the Study of Israel and the Jewish People. “Public opinion does not think three moves ahead in strategic terms,” Rynold said. “It appreciates the immediate symbolism of the US taking Israel’s side versus the Palestinians.”
The UN established UNRWA in 1949 to help Palestinian refugees, and it now assists millions of people, chiefly through educational and health services. It isn’t associated with the Palestinian government and doesn’t take part in peace negotiations with Israel.

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