Outcry as Israel bans main UN Palestinian aid agency
The Straits Times|October 30, 2024
Agency has provided essential schooling, aid and healthcare for over 7 decades
Outcry as Israel bans main UN Palestinian aid agency

JERUSALEM - Israel faced an international backlash on Oct 28 after its Parliament approved a Bill banning the main UN aid agency for the devastated Gaza Strip, where deadly bombing continues.

Despite global concern, including by Israel's ally the United States, Israeli lawmakers overwhelmingly voted to ban the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, from working in Israel and occupied east Jerusalem.

The lawmakers also passed a measure prohibiting Israeli officials from working with UNRWA and its employees.

Israel strictly controls all humanitarian aid shipments to Gaza, where its forces have been fighting Palestinian militant group Hamas for more than a year in a conflict that the Hamas-run territory's health ministry says has killed more than 43,000 Palestinians.

The danger faced by residents of the densely populated territory was underlined when an Israeli strike destroyed a five-storey residential block and killed more than 55 people, Gaza's civil defence agency said.

There was no immediate comment from Israel on the reported bombing in Beit Lahia, but the Israeli military said its air and ground forces had continued operations in Gaza and south Lebanon.

UNRWA has provided essential aid, schooling and healthcare across the Palestinian territories and to Palestinian refugees elsewhere for over seven decades.

"There is a deep connection between the terrorist organisation (Hamas) and UNRWA and Israel cannot put up with it," lawmaker Yuli Edelstein said in Parliament as he presented the proposal.

But several of Israel's Western allies voiced disquiet at the ban, with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer saying Britain was "gravely concerned" by the legislation.

This story is from the October 30, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.

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This story is from the October 30, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.

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