An Australian government insider has accused the Israeli ambassador of making “shockingly amateurish and counterproductive” comments in a rift over the potential to reinstate funding to a key UN agency.
The Israeli ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, said on Friday that Australia had previously backed “a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza that would only help Hamas to reorganise” and now seemed to have forgotten “Hamas’s culpability” for the crisis in the territory.
But a senior government source hit back, telling Guardian Australia: “When the Australian government is using its voice to advocate for a pathway out of the conflict that serves the interests of Israelis and Palestinians alike, these comments are shockingly amateurish and counterproductive.”
Joe Biden issues executive order against Israeli settlers in West BankRead more
The tensions have been sparked by debate over whether Australia might unfreeze $6m in funds it pledged in mid-January to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which provides services to Palestinian refugees.
More than 10 donor countries – including Australia, the US and the UK – suspended funding to UNRWA last weekend after allegations from Israel that as many as 12 of its staff were involved in the 7 October Hamas attacks.
Israel, which has long been critical of UNRWA, has argued the agency’s problems go deeper than the allegations surrounding 7 October involvement and it should have no future role in Gaza.
These allegations include that its schools have used textbooks containing antisemitic content and that other employees are connected to or sympathetic to Hamas.
UNRWA says in addition to dismissing staff accused of involvement in 7 October, it has ordered several investigations, but the funding shortfall means it may not be able to sustain its operations beyond the end of February.
The Australian foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, said the allegations against UNRWA staff were “deeply concerning” and they needed to be “thoroughly investigated and those responsible need to be held to account”.
Wong has directed Australia’s humanitarian coordinator, Beth Delaney, to “lead urgent work coordinating with like-minded partners as well as UNRWA” to work out the next steps.
Wong said it was important to remember “the scale of the humanitarian crisis” in Gaza and “the absence of any alternatives if we are serious about trying to ensure that fewer children are starving”.
She noted estimates from the UN “that 400,000 Palestinians in Gaza are actually starving and a million are at risk of starvation” and that 1.7 million people in Gaza were internally displaced.
“There are increasingly few safe places for Palestinians to go,” Wong said on Thursday.
That promoted Maimon to hit back at the government publicly. He said 136 Israeli hostages, including infants, were still “held in Hamas dungeons without any trace of assistance from the UN or any of its agencies”.
“Now,…
2024-02-02 17:06:08
Source from www.theguardian.com