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PRESS RELEASE
8 October 2008
UNRWA Commissioner General
Appeals for Arab Funds for Nahr el Bared Refugees
Vienna, 8 October 2008

The Commissioner-General of the UN Relief and Works
Agency (UNRWA) has made an urgent appeal for Arab funds for emergency
assistance to some thirty thousand Palestine refugees whose homes were
destroyed by fighting last year at the Nahr el Bared camp in Northern
Lebanon. Karen AbuZayd called on "Arab donors to help UNRWA respond
adequately to the humanitarian needs of these refugees who have endured
more than their fair share of misery and displacement."
Last month, the UN's Palestine Refugee Agency
appealed for $43 million for temporary services such as emergency food
rations and shelter, but so far only the United States has come forward
with a firm pledge of $4.3 million, while a few European donors have
indicated a willingness to pledge. No donations have been forthcoming
from Arab donors. UNRWA officials have said that if funds do not come in
soon, essential emergency programmes will be severely reduced, since
$2.5 million is needed every month for basic emergency assistance.
"Unless we receive additional contributions by the end of the year,
services to refugees will suffer. We must not allow that to happen,"
said AbuZayd.
She was speaking in Vienna at the signing of an
agreement between UNRWA and OFID (the OPEC Fund for International
Development), worth $5 million for the building of eight new schools to
replace those destroyed by the fighting in Nahr el Bared. OFID has
contributed $7 million to UNRWA projects since 2004 and today is the
single largest supporter of the Agency's microfinance programmes which
give refugees an escape from the poverty trap and offer financial
self-sufficiency. "This is a co-operative enterprise for which UNRWA is
grateful and in which we can all take pride," said the Commissioner-
General.
AbuZayd also pointed out that OFID was among the
first donors to respond to a joint appeal by UNRWA and the Lebanese
Government for $445 million for the rebuilding of Nahr el Bared. This
will be the largest project in UNRWA's near 60 year history. In
her Vienna speech, she pointed out that of the $57.8 million pledged so
far, 91% was from Western governments. "I hope I will soon learn of Arab
government pledges, widely anticipated – and essential – if this project
is to go ahead as planned."
Giving an overview of UNRWA's financial situation,
AbuZayd said that her organisation was facing a shortfall of $80 million
from its regular budget, in part because of the rising cost of fuel
which had "hit UNRWA hard." She appealed to OPEC countries to help cover
$4 million of fuel costs for UNRWA operations for twelve months in the
occupied Palestinian territory pointing out that the Agency helps "local
municipalities in Gaza with fuel supplies for garbage disposal lest
epidemics break out."
-Ends-
For more information please contact:
Chris Gunness, UNRWA Spokesperson, East Jerusalem:
+972-542-402-659 or c.gunness@unwra.org
Hoda Samra, UNRWA Public Information Officer, Beirut:
+961-1-840-461ext. 314 or h.samra@unrwa.org |