Published 18:54 24.11.11
The Palestinian Authority is "fast approaching the point of
being completely incapacitated" by Israel's refusal to hand over tax revenues belonging to the authority, Palestinian Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad said Thursday.
Israel's freeze on the taxes and fees it collects for the Palestinian
Authority at borders has deprived the government of two-thirds of its normal revenue since Nov. 1, making it hard to pay salaries
and fix infrastructure, Fayyad said.
"This is our money," he said. "It has nothing to do with donor
assistance or anything like that."
He spoke at a press conference alongside Norwegian Foreign Minister
Jonas Gahr Stoere, who demanded an end to the policy that Israel imposed a day after the UN cultural agency UNESCO granted
full membership to the Palestinians.
"It amounts to waterboarding an economy," Stoere said, "because
you almost kill it while allowing a small amount of air to come in."
Israel has called the withholding of funds temporary and complained
the Palestinians were unwilling to open direct peace talks, while Palestinian leaders have said they would talk only if Israel
halts settlement activity in areas it occupies.
Fayyad said the frozen funds amount to some $100 million per
month, or two-thirds of the Palestinian Authority's revenue stream excluding international aid.
From haaretz.com