The Daily - The U.N. Scandal Threatening Crucial Aid to Gaza
Episode Date: February 6, 2024Late last month, an explosive allegation that workers from a crucial U.N. relief agency in Gaza had taken part in the Oct. 7 attacks stunned the world and prompted major donors, including the United S...tates, to suspend funding.Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for The Times, explains what this could mean for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and how it might complicate Israel’s strategy in the war.Guest: Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for The New York Times.Background reading: U.N. Agency for Palestinians Imperiled by Terrorism ChargesThe 8 Days That Roiled the U.N.’s Top Agency in GazaUNRWA Set to Lose $65 Million, Documents ShowFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
We turn now to Israel, where a growing list of countries around the world have suspended funding to a U.N. refugee agency for Palestinians.
Israel has now shared its intelligence, claiming at least 13 U.N. aid workers actually took part in the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7th.
Late last month, an explosive allegation that workers from a crucial U.N. relief agency in Gaza had taken part in the October 7th attacks stunned the world and prompted major donors, including the U.S., to suspend funding.
and prompted major donors, including the U.S., to suspend funding.
Today, Jerusalem Bureau Chief Patrick Kingsley on what this could mean for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza
and how it might complicate Israel's strategy in the war.
It's Tuesday, February 6th.
Patrick, hi.
Hi, Sabrina.
So the last time we talked, late last year, there was this growing humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
Most of the population had been displaced.
Disease and hunger were starting to emerge as bigger and bigger problems.
Now the situation has gotten worse.
And in the midst of all of this, the main UN relief agency in Gaza, known as UNRWA,
has been engulfed in scandal over accusations that some of its staff actually played a role
in the October 7th attack.
Yes.
So tell me the story and what we know.
What we know is this.
On January 18th, the head of UMRA, Philip Gazzarini,
went to what was expected to be a routine meeting with a senior Israeli diplomat
to discuss delivery of aid and fuel to Gaza, the supplies that Umbra helps to
coordinate. Instead, the Israeli diplomat dropped a bombshell accusation. He claimed that roughly a
dozen employees of Umbra had either participated in the Hamas-led raid on Israel on October 7th,
or in one case, in its aftermath.
Wow. So that is quite a bombshell.
It's a very serious allegation. This is just a small, tiny minority of the 13,000 employees
of AMRA in Gaza. But nevertheless, it's too many, and certainly not what you expect of a UN agency
that is devoted to neutrality
and humanitarianism.
Right.
So actually, tell us what this agency does in Gaza.
AMRA is the main aid organization for Palestinians that is run by the United Nations.
In times outside war, it provides education and primary health care for roughly 5 million Palestinians
across the Middle East, including more than a million in Gaza itself. It runs hundreds of
schools and provides education for roughly 300,000 Gazan children. Since the war has begun, it has been the primary supplier of shelter to displaced
Palestinians. More than half the population is now living in an Umrah facility. Its schools and
other facilities have provided a roof over the head of some 1.2 million Gazans since the start
of the war. A crucial organization,
especially in this moment. Yes, absolutely. And after that meeting with the senior Israeli
diplomat, Lazzarini, the head of Amra, begins to fire nine of the employees who are accused of
participating in the attack. Two of them, we believe, are already dead, and at least one of
them in the attack itself.
Then the UN starts to tell the donor states that provide Amru with most of its funding,
chief among them the United States.
And that led to senior American diplomats being briefed on the claims, and they were presented by Israeli officials with a dossier outlining these claims.
presented by Israeli officials with a dossier outlining these claims.
On that same day, Amra decided to announce to the world that these allegations had been made against some of their employees
and that some of them had already been fired.
Now, the UN has fired nine UN members.
We understand two more are being looked into.
And that news led the United States and then a cascade of more than a dozen other countries to
suspend their funding for UNRA, pending further investigation. The US has paused funding to the
UN agency that is actually providing aid to the Palestinians. Canada announced it too has temporarily paused any additional... The latest to hold aid being
Germany. Japan and Austria became the latest countries to suspend payments. And this came
on the same day... Hours after the UN's top court ordered Israel to take measures to prevent acts
of genocide in Gaza. That the International Court of Justice in The Hague had ruled that in order to prevent
a genocide Israel needed to supply more aid to Gaza. And so at a time when more aid was supposed
to be coming in to Gaza, the UN's biggest aid agency was running the risk of collapse. The
head of UNRWA is calling for all those nations
who are suspending funding right now to change their minds.
Given the desperate plight of so many,
this would be a heavy blow if UNRWA's operations were suspended in some way.
And indeed, we've been told by UNRWA's leadership that if the funds aren't restored by the end of
February, it will struggle to operate. That could have grave implications for the distribution of
aid and the provision of shelter to more than a million Gazans just at the wrong time. Just as
we're told that famine is looming in parts of Gaza. More than half the buildings
in Gaza are damaged or destroyed, according to UN estimates. And around 2 million people
out of 2.2 million have been displaced. So it couldn't be happening, this convergence of events
at a worse time. Right. An already bad situation is likely to get a lot
worse for Gazans. Yes, exactly. What were the actual charges, Patrick? I mean, what did you
learn about that? Well, to begin with, it really wasn't clear what the specific allegations were.
We had this statement from Amra saying that there were claims against various employees. There was talk of a
dossier, but no one was releasing any information. So what me and our colleague Ronen Bergman did,
we spent the weekend calling up as many sources as we could reach, trying to find out exactly what
this dossier had said.
And two days after the allegations broke, we finally got our hands on the dossier itself.
And what it alleged was shocking.
It said that, for example, one of the employees, a teacher,
had been involved in a raid on the Israeli village of Be'eri,
where roughly 100 people were killed during the October 7th attack.
It said another person was involved in the kidnapping of a woman.
It said that a third person was involved in the capture of a soldier's corpse on October 7th.
And so on and so on. The list went on.
The dossier said the information was mainly taken from wiretaps of people's phones
and also through the geolocation of people's phones on the day of October 7th.
We could only confirm the identity of one of the people accused, but we had no way of verifying the material ourselves.
All we knew was that Umbra had decided themselves to take action, both firing nine people and announcing the news publicly.
And that wasn't all.
The dossier also had another claim, an even bigger claim that had not previously
been reported. And that was that according to the Israeli military, roughly a tenth of Amr's
staff of 13,000 inside Gaza were affiliated or members of Hamas and other militant factions.
Wow.
And this was an astonishing claim for an agency that is supposed to be neutral, supposed to
be independent of political groups, let alone armed groups.
Right.
And once again, this was an impossible to verify claim, and the Israelis have not publicly produced any
evidence to support it.
Nevertheless, they say that this calculation is taken by cross-referencing a list of Amr
staff members in Gaza with lists or a list of Hamas members that the Israeli military had taken during its invasion of Gaza from
computers that they found in Hamas bases inside the territory.
But Patrick, what exactly does Israel mean when it says 10% of the staff, some 1,300
people, were considered members of Hamas?
Like, are we talking about militants?
Are we talking about government bureaucrats? Because, of course, Hamas. Like, are we talking about militants? Are we talking
about government bureaucrats? Because of course, Hamas is the government of Gaza.
The claim was that roughly 200 of those 1,300 were involved in militant activities.
The rest of the 1,300, so the vast majority, were people involved in the political movement or the social movement of Hamas.
Remember that Hamas is not just an armed faction that fires rockets at Israel or that attacked Israel on October 7th.
It's also a social movement that has deep roots in society and helps to run a civilian government.
helps to run a civilian government.
And there is quite a lot of overlap between its membership and the general population of Gaza,
which is not to say that the majority of Gazans are affiliated with Hamas,
but just to say that, in a way, it's not that surprising
that any large institution in Gaza would have some level of overlap
with a political movement and a social
movement as large as Hamas. Amra takes its staff predominantly in Gaza from the population of Gaza.
The 13,000 Amra staff members are mostly not international aid workers from other countries.
They come from the place that they are working in, Gaza.
And indeed, if you go anywhere in the world,
any experienced aid worker will tell you
that it's a constant challenge to maintain independence
from any armed group or rebel group,
be it in South Sudan or Northern Sri Lanka.
And that these are common challenges
that affect the aid sector, wherever they work.
All that said, the UN is supposed to be a politically neutral body, and that's what
gives the UN its gravitas and its power. This is an institution that's meant to be above politics,
above division, and it's not supposed to be compromised by any party to a conflict.
So its workers should not be members of Hamas
or any other Palestinian political armed group,
for that matter.
Right.
If it's true, this claim would be hugely damning.
Yes.
And once this information,
this 10% figure,
was brought to the attention of the wider world,
it cemented in the eyes of Umbra's critics
the idea that something was rotten within UNRWA.
And that came as more countries suspended their funding.
And it led, a couple of days later...
And I think it's time that the international community and the UN itself
understand that UNRWA's mission has to end.
To Benjamin Netanyahu, for the first time since the allegations were made. There are other
agencies in the UN, there are other agencies in the world, they have to replace UNRWA. Calling
specifically for UNRWA's dissolution. What, if anything, has Hamas said about this? I mean,
do they confirm or deny that these folks are in fact members of Hamas? So I asked the Hamas folks on that question and didn't
get a clear answer. What they have publicly said is that they condemn Amra for criticizing
the actions of anyone who has participated in what they see as legitimate resistance
against Israel, but what much of the world sees as acts of brutal terrorism.
And they also criticized UNRWA for firing some of its employees based on material given to it
by Hamas's enemy, Israel. So Patrick, this relationship between UNRWA and Hamas is very
fraught. UNRWA is responsible for critical services in Gaza, you know, social safety net for a big swath
of the country. And that's in normal times and has to navigate working side by side with the
government, which is Hamas, which is considered a terrorist group by the U.S. and the EU and others.
And now in the midst of the war, UNRWA is even more critical to the people of Gaza,
who are trying to survive the bombardments and the invasion following Hamas's October 7th attack on Israel. But UNRWA is also now facing the scrutiny
for having staff associated with that attack. So that's all very complicated. It's hugely
complicated. UNRWA is independent of Hamas. It's got formally nothing to do with the group,
but it nevertheless operates within a dictatorial regime in which Hamas. It's got formally nothing to do with the group, but it nevertheless operates
within a dictatorial regime in which Hamas is the ruler. And that forces it to work side by side
with Hamas. And at the same time, they also have to coordinate with the Israeli armed forces
in order to ensure that aid and other supplies and also their own international employees can enter
and exit Gaza. So this has all been very difficult to navigate for years. During the 2021 war with
Israel, for example, or just after it, the most senior Amra official in Gaza made comments that
were perceived to be favorable towards Israel's military operations.
And there was such an outcry in Gaza and from Hamas because of that, that this official was
withdrawn from Amra. But from the Israeli perspective, this kind of tension between
Amra and Hamas is a fig leaf that obscures a more symbiotic relationship in which Amra is not fully independent and operates,
in their view, under Hamas's influence. Amra denies that completely and says that it's
totally neutral. But nevertheless, the accusation has long been that Amra works
under the influence of Hamas. So in a way, this latest incident is just one in a long line of flashpoints
between Amra and Israel that goes back decades.
If for Palestinians, Amra is an icon and something of a protector,
to many Israelis, it's a consistent problem.
And this latest incident simply confirmed perceptions
that Israelis have long held about the group.
We'll be right back. So Patrick, you said that many in Israel have long believed that UNRWA is a consistent problem.
What do you mean by that?
What I mean is they take issue with what they say that the agency fundamentally stands for.
And that goes all the way back to the reasons why it was founded in 1949, a year after Israel was founded.
At that time, you had roughly more than 700,000 Palestinian refugees who had fled or been forced from their homes during the wars that surrounded the creation of the state of Israel.
And to care for those refugees who have been scattered all across the Middle East, in Lebanon,
in Jordan, and in Gaza, the UN founded one of the first UN agencies in its history. It was called the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, or UNRWA for short.
And its job was to provide education and other services to those refugees.
And for the 74 years since, it has basically acted implicitly, if not directly, to maintain the
identity of those Palestinian refugees and to, in the Israeli view, sustain the idea in those
refugees' minds that one day, because they're refugees, they might actually return to the place that
they were forced from. And they might one day come back, live in the homes that their families
lived in, in what became Israel. But to Israelis, that is an enormously threatening idea because if you had 5 million Palestinians returning to Israel, as these refugees and their descendants now number, it would completely dilute the Jewish character of the Jewish state.
And Israelis don't want that. also threatening because the idea of 5 million people coming from territory where Israel has
fought many wars for decades with is a security threat. It's also a logistical threat. How would
it work if 5 million people or even a small minority come to Israel and try to move into
the villages where they once lived, many of which were destroyed.
Then there's another perspective,
which more or less acknowledges all the criticisms that Israel makes
about the very character of the institution of Amra.
But in the Palestinian perspective, this is a good thing.
While many people who are classified today as Palestinian refugees
were not alive in 1948,
they nevertheless feel that it is their right to return to land on which their ancestors
lived on many years previously. So in a sense, there's quite a lot of common ground between
the Israeli and Palestinian perspective of Amra. One side just thinks its existence is a bad thing,
and the other thinks it's a good thing. So I guess I get how this agency could symbolically represent a threat to Israel.
But in reality, how much is this aid organization actually a threat to the state of Israel?
I mean, how much are they actually working toward Palestinians getting to return to what
is now Israel?
Well, the claim is not that the leaders
of Amra are going around directly mobilizing Palestinian refugees to return to Israel.
A lot of the debate around Amra centers on what is taught in its schools. In Israel,
it has not gone unnoticed that of the dozen people accused of participating in the October 7th attack,
several of them were either teachers or workers in those schools.
And the curriculums in those schools have also come under tremendous Israeli scrutiny.
In one case, researchers highlighted how a textbook glorified a Palestinian militant who was involved in a
terror attack on Israeli civilians in the 1970s called Dalal Maghrabi. And in other cases,
Israeli researchers have highlighted maps of Palestine published in textbooks used in
Amra schools that do not include the state of Israel. Amra has, in some cases, acknowledged these criticisms
and has said it's taken action to withdraw those particular materials from circulation.
And Palestinians, for their part, also make similar criticisms of the Israeli education system,
where you often see maps of Israel that don't include the West Bank or Gaza
or assume that the West Bank is part of the State of Israel.
And Palestinians in general point out that the education system that is provided in Amra
schools and in other parts of the Palestinian education system is of a fairly good standard.
The literacy rate among Palestinians stands at 95%, which is nearly 10 points higher than the global average.
The other major criticism that Israelis make about Amra is that it somehow turns a blind eye to Hamas's militant activity that Hamas or other militant groups have stored ammunition inside Umrah
facilities or have fired rockets from very close to Umrah schools or even dug tunnels underneath
its buildings. And Umrah says that when it finds out about this, it takes action and has even
publicized some of these transgressions
itself. And ultimately, it can't do much if people fire rockets from close to its schools.
It's not an armed institution and has no means of combating that.
So for the critics of UNRWA, the idea is basically that UNRWA is supporting the Hamas agenda,
which is, of course, the destruction of Israel, through propaganda,
and then looking the other way when Hamas uses their facilities for war. But UNRWA is saying,
we don't have a military to stop any of this stuff. We're just trying to provide services the best we can in an extremely difficult environment. Yes. And that's why an allegation
like the ones we've been hearing in recent days have been so damaging because it suggests that
UNRWA isn't just an independent institution working within a difficult environment, but that
it has been infiltrated by people who are members of the group that the UN is saying it's independent
from. So I have to imagine that people who've been making these accusations all of these years are
feeling pretty satisfied that these allegations have come to light
and are being seen by the world and taken seriously by the world?
I think yes and no.
Some people are delighted.
They're saying, we've always said this,
and finally these ideas are getting prime time.
Others may agree fundamentally that UMRA is this nefarious organization,
but they don't feel
this is the time to try and bring it down because as much as they dislike the premise
of what Amra stands for, they recognize that it plays a huge and important role in sustaining
life ultimately during a devastating war that has killed roughly one in a hundred Gazans, according to Gazan official estimates.
And they don't have a plan for what could replace Amra
and who could step in,
who has the manpower and the logistical footprint
to deliver aid, to provide shelter.
And there are fears that if Amra collapses,
it would hugely worsen
what is already a very dire humanitarian situation.
Right.
I've spoken to Israeli officials and former officials, and they see it as part of a lack
of strategic planning on the part of the Israeli government, which is avoiding very difficult
questions about what Israel wants to see in Gaza after the war ebbs. And for some of them, it's also exactly
the wrong thing to be doing at a time when Israel stands accused of genocide. And in particular,
when the world's highest court, the International Court of Justice in The Hague, has just ordered Israel to prevent genocide in part by increasing more aid to Gaza.
And on the same day that that order was made, we instead see a number of countries start pulling
funding for the biggest aid operation in the Gaza Strip, which raises questions about whether, in fact,
we'll see less aid rather than more. Right. Obviously, the question of aid is most critical
to the ongoing struggle of Gazans to simply survive this war. But for Israel, the idea that
the main aid agency in Gaza would be hobbled, and therefore the humanitarian crisis there would get worse,
is both a practical problem, but also a problem for how the world sees Israel in this moment.
Absolutely. It's a perception problem for Israel, but it's also a perception problem for
many of the Western countries, including the United States, who were the first to pull funding for Umbra as this scandal broke.
If Israel has a reputation problem as a result of this war,
so too does the United States and the Biden administration
because of its support for Israel.
And its own reputation and perceptions of its intentions
are also wrapped up in Israel's fate and Gaza's.
Yeah, it's a very tricky situation for the U.S. and other funders.
On the one hand, they don't want to be perceived as having anything to do with anyone who has anything to do with Hamas.
On the other hand, they also don't want to be seen as being responsible in any way for this humanitarian crisis,
one that will get worse if the one real aid organization goes away.
Exactly. But we have seen attempts by U.S. officials to cast this suspension in a different
light. We've seen stories come out saying that actually the U.S US was not due to send more funding for a while and that
the last remaining tranche of the funding it was supposed to provide in this particular funding
cycle was minimal and that in essence the suspension was more of a symbolic move than
one that would actually have practical effect on Umbra's budget. So kind of trying to walk it back a bit.
Exactly.
All that said, while the US is the main funder or the largest funder of UMRA,
the collective effect of all the other suspensions from more than a dozen other countries
could well be damaging enough to leave UMRA in major trouble.
And according to UMRA, it could go out of business,
they say, by the end of the month,
because there are so many other suspensions of funding from other sources.
So actually, many in Israel,
you know, the US and countries around the world,
and most of all Gazans,
are aligned in having pretty serious interest in
UNRWA not collapsing right now. Exactly. And the key words there are
right now. While this war goes on, certainly there is a strange and perhaps surprising alignment
of interests, if not motives. Right.
In the long term, of course, there remain profound disagreements,
not only about the future of Amra, but the future of Gaza and who should govern it,
what role should Hamas play, what role should Israel play, what role should other Palestinian
leaders play, and of course, what role should Amra play and should it play any role at all.
play and should it play any role at all. Israel wants to see a completely different architecture of aid agencies and aid distribution. Others think it's entirely the wrong time to be discussing
revamping the aid system in a territory where more than 80% of people are displaced, more than
half the buildings are damaged or destroyed.
And one in 100 people has been killed.
Patrick, thank you.
Thank you, Sabrina.
Thank you, Sabrina. or institutions announced suspensions of funding. Some, like the United States,
had already made scheduled payments.
But others, including Finland, Germany, Japan, and Sweden, had not, and are now set to miss them.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Monday, a powerful storm pummeled California for a second day,
with wind and rain causing flooding, mudslides,
and widespread power outages. The relentless downpour, which began on Sunday morning,
dumped a record amount of rain on Los Angeles, making Sunday the 10th wettest day in the history of the city. At least three people died across the state, including from falling trees in northern California.
On Monday afternoon, as the rain continued, officials warned of the potential danger of more flooding and mudslides.
Today's episode was produced by Ricky Nowetzki, Will Reed, and Sydney Harper, with help from Muj Zady. It was edited by
Paige Cowett, with help from MJ Davis-Lynn. Fact-checked by Susan Lee. Contains original
music by Marian Lozano and Alicia Baitu, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music
is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.