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UNRWA Commissioner General Filippo Grandi. UN Photo/Devra Berkowitz |
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=43444&Cr=palestin&Cr1=#.UJwef9amWS4
8 November 2012 – Addressing the General Assembly today, a senior
United Nations official today called for a “just solution” to the plight
of the five million Palestine refugees.
The Commissioner-General of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (
UNRWA),
Filippo Grandi, also expressed “extreme concern” that most of the
518,000 Palestine refugees in Syria were now directly caught up in the
conflict and called for greater protection for civilians in the country.
A significant number of Palestinian refugees, as well as Syrians, “had
been killed, injured and compelled to leave their homes,” he noted,
while also paying tribute to five Palestinian UNRWA staff members killed
in Syria – the latest a female teacher killed on Monday in the capital,
Damascus.
Syria has been wracked by violence, with at least 20,000 people, mostly
civilians, killed since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad
began some 20 months ago. The violence has spawned more than 380,000
refugees, while more than 2.5 million people are in need of humanitarian
assistance, according to UN estimates.
Established by the General Assembly in 1949, UNRWA is mandated to
provide assistance and protection to a population of some five million
registered Palestinian refugees in various countries throughout the
Middle East. Its services include education, relief and social services,
camp infrastructure and improvement, health care and emergency
assistance.
UNRWA, in a news release, noted that the losses in Syria reflected the
vulnerability of the half million Palestinian refugees in the country,
and in the region in general.
“The loss of our staff – Palestine refugees themselves – brings home to
us in the starkest terms the human dimension of the Palestine refugee
question,” Mr. Grandi said in his presentation to the Assembly’s
so-called Fourth Committee, which deals with a variety of political
subjects, including the issue of Palestinian refugees.
In addition to the conflict in Syria, noted the UN official, Palestinian
refugees have been affected by an Israeli blockade of Gaza, with UNRWA
struggling to provide food assistance to almost 800,000 vulnerable
refugees there.
In the West Bank, where refugees are almost 30 per cent of the total
population, Mr. Grandi cited continued settlement expansion, settler
violence, land expropriation, building prohibitions, increased
demolitions, movement restrictions and the asphyxiation of traditional
herding as “a gradual erosion of space and rights for Palestine refugees
and indeed for all Palestinians… a cause of unbearable hardship for
countless people, and a major obstacle to peace.”
The Commissioner-General condemned a “lack of real action” to halt rights violations in the West Bank.
He added, “Public statements are made condemning settlement expansion
and other violations of international law, but without political
determination to stop it, the colonizing enterprise, which the United
Nations and the international community clearly consider illegal, will
move forward inexorably, with impunity, and with potentially dangerous
consequences.’
In his remarks, the Commissioner-General also highlighted that despite
political developments in the region – such as the Arab Spring –
Palestinians, and Palestinian refugees in particular – remain sidelined,
while the agency’s efforts to provide assistance and protection for the
five million refugees scattered throughout the Middle East “was not
becoming any easier.”
He highlighted two key challenges to it carrying out its mandated tasks: the scarcity of funds and the prevalence of conflict.
UNRWA was chronically underfunded, he said – with only 41 per cent of
its emergency appeal met in 2011 – and subject to renewed political
attacks.
While paying tribute to the generosity of UNRWA’s main group of donors,
the Commissioner-General also underlined that the agency’s budget
supporting its education, health, relief, protection and social services
is in a perilous state, while refugee needs have grown and costs have
increased.
With that in mind, the UN official urgently appealed for funding from
countries in Asia, Latin America and the Middle East, where economic
growth was increasingly matched by a more assertive political role.
“UNRWA – neither the cause, nor the solution to the question of
refugees, but the only tangible support felt by many of them – is more
necessary than ever”, said Mr. Grandi. “Give us your backing, so that
together we can ensure that Palestine refugees lead productive lives,
while the political dimensions of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict are
addressed in a comprehensive and just manner.”
Wrapping up his presentation, the Commissioner-General also flagged the
need for support from the international community, warning that the
frustration, marginalization and “collective hopelessness” felt among
Palestinians today could have disastrous consequences if continually
ignored.
“Palestine refugees may be a political question, but they are first and
foremost people – ordinary men and women who rightly insist on not being
discarded and forgotten about as the flotsam and jetsam of history,” he
added.