
|
Commissioner-General’s Statement to
Council of Ministers of the League of Arab States
Cairo, 5 September 2007 |
 |
Your Excellency the Secretary General, Your
Excellencies,
It is an honour to be invited to address the Council
of Ministers of the Arab League. I am most grateful to the Secretary
General for this opportunity, which is evidence of the Arab League’s
concern for the most vulnerable among Palestinians, namely Palestine
refugees.
UNRWA’s activities
Your Excellencies will be aware that my Agency’s
mandate is to address the humanitarian and human development needs of
Palestine refugees in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and the occupied
Palestinian territory. Our largest programme – and over half of our
budget – is devoted to educating half a million refugee children every
year. UNRWA’s 127 clinics provide comprehensive primary health care
services that count among its achievements the eradication of
communicable diseases and nearly 100% child vaccinations. We offer food
and social services to the poorest of the poor: the widows, the aged,
the handicapped and the sick. We address shelter, sewerage and
environmental health needs in 58 camps. And when – as sadly happens all
too often - armed conflict triggers emergency situations in Gaza, the
West Bank and Lebanon, our programmes for temporary employment, cash
assistance, food distribution and shelter provision contribute to the
refugees’ survival.
My Agency’s humanitarian work is reinforced by its
role as a global advocate for the protection and care of Palestine
refugees. Our extensive field presence, with some 27,000 staff, most of
them refugees themselves, gives us unique, first-hand insights into the
living conditions of refugees and the threats they face from de-facto
sanctions and armed conflict. Drawing on these insights, we call the
attention of regional and international actors to the realities faced by
Palestine refugees. We also remind these actors of their
responsibilities under international law to give precedence to peaceful
methods for resolving disputes; to minimize human suffering, protect
civilian lives, and to act with restraint in armed conflict; to
safeguard livelihoods and promote humane socio-economic conditions; and
ultimately to fashion a just and lasting answer to the refugee question.
UNRWA’s years of consistent and committed service
have earned it the trust and confidence of refugees and all who have a
genuine interest in the welfare of Palestinians. The Agency and its work
have come to symbolize the view that the international community cares
about human development and humanitarian needs and wants these to be
addressed in spite of the challenging political and security
environment. Our humanitarian presence mitigates the refugee community’s
sense of isolation and thus serves as a stabilizing influence in the
midst of tensions and conflict.
The regional scene
Your Excellencies, allow me to highlight some of the
major challenges as we see them. Wherever we look on the regional scene
we see difficulties for Palestine refugees. Over one million in Gaza are
living in a state of hardship and uncertainty, fearful of further
conflict and deeper decline in their conditions, but not knowing when
the next crises will emerge. Gazan civilians continue to suffer the
effects of an armed conflict in which the injunctions of restraint and
proportionality stipulated under international law are ignored. On the
present trajectory of isolation and de facto sanctions, poverty,
unemployment and socio-economic impoverishment will soon reach
unconscionable levels.
The situation of Palestine refugees in the West Bank
is scarcely much better. An unrelenting military campaign has made
arbitrary arrests, the demolition of homes, civilian deaths, injuries
and extreme humiliation a part of Palestinian life. Closures, road
blocks, the separation barrier and restrictive Israeli administrative
practices have imposed indignity and material hardship on many
Palestinians with adverse consequences for the economy. Deprived of
access to their lands and livelihoods, many refugees find it impossible
to sustain themselves and their families and are forced to depend on
international humanitarian support.
In Lebanon 31,000 refugees have been rendered
homeless by the fighting in Nahr El Bared Camp. Most have also lost
their livelihoods. In concert with the Lebanese government, UNRWA will
soon launch an Emergency Appeal to fund assistance to displaced refugees
over the next twelve months.
The situation of the refugees in Lebanon who are not
directly affected by the battle of Nahr El Bared is less acute.
Nevertheless, their living conditions and their access to economic
opportunities are a matter of grave concern. We are grateful to the
Lebanese government for recognizing the refugees’ needs and for taking
up the challenge to address them.
In Jordan and Syria the refugees face less dramatic
circumstances than those in Gaza or North Lebanon, and the respective
governments are supportive and generous. That is not to say, however,
that the material conditions in which the refugees live are to be
envied. There is much room for enhancing refugees’ standard of living,
expanding their possibilities for economic self-reliance and for
improving the quality of our services.
Financial challenges
Your Excellencies, this is an appropriate juncture at
which to brief you on the financial challenges facing my Agency, which,
as you know, is funded almost entirely by voluntary contributions. Owing
to a chronic funding shortfall, UNRWA is struggling to maintain
standards in our schools and clinics. A decade and a half of inadequate
funding has taken a heavy toll on the quality of our services. This is
painfully obvious in Gaza schools where recent tests show that over 70%
of children do not make the grade in mathematics and Arabic. As the
refugee population in most areas naturally increases, and as more and
more refugee families fall into poverty, the demands for our services
increase while our income remains more or less stagnant. This decline in
the quality of services is insidious, and demoralizing to refugees. In
the long term, it is also dangerous, because it hampers the ability of
refugees to become self-reliant, and jeopardizes the human development
ideals to which our programmes aspire.
In many of our schools, classes of over 40 children
pack the schoolrooms. Many schools operate double shifts. School
buildings are crumbling and equipment ageing. Children sit at the same
wooden desks at which their parents sat. In our clinics many weary
doctors struggle through daily case loads of a hundred patients. Too
often, conditions in the camps sap the energy and optimism of refugee
youth, fuelling discontent and disillusionment about their future.
UNRWA’s regular programmes exist on a basic income of
375 million dollars a year. I use the word "exist" deliberately because
current funding levels do not allow us to develop, improve or even
maintain our standards. To do these things to the minimum level required
we would need $107 million more a year. And that is not counting our
emergency programmes for the occupied Palestinian territory - job
creation, extra food and cash support for the most needy. This year,
these emergency programmes appear likely to be under-funded to the tune
of 120 million dollars.
Arab donors
The Secretary General has been kind enough to
circulate my letter to him which cited some statistics about Arab donor
support for UNRWA. The facts speak for themselves; I do not need to
belabour them. Last year Arab donations accounted for less than 2% of
our basic needs. Including support for special programmes and
construction projects, that proportion was 4%.
On behalf of the Palestine refugees we are very
grateful for the generous contributions made by Gulf donors, in
particular the United Arab Emirates government, the UAE Red Crescent
organization and the government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. They
have financed construction projects in the occupied Palestinian
territory which stand out in an otherwise gloomy picture. As regards
UNRWA’s General Fund, I should mention our appreciation for the
government of Kuwait’s consistent annual contributions.
We also recognize with deep appreciation the
sacrifices made and the heavy costs borne by Syria, Jordan and Lebanon,
and by the Palestinian Authority, in hosting Palestine refugees. The
host authorities are among UNRWA’s most important partners. Without
them, our work would not be possible. And we do not overlook the other
ways in which Arab countries have given generous support to the
Palestinians through the Palestinian Authority and others, such as the
12 million dollars sent by Saudi Arabia to help the displaced of Nahr El
Bared and the 5 million dollars promised by His Highness Shaikh Khalifa
bin Zayed, President of the UAE.
Whilst acknowledging with gratitude the generosity of
your donations, there is no escaping the fact that the contributions
made by Arab donors to UNRWA’s General Fund are modest – not least in
comparison to contributions from other donors who have no historical or
cultural relationship to Palestine refugees. With these considerations
in mind, we would warmly welcome the achievement of the target of 7.73%
of UNRWA’s regular budget as endorsed by Arab League resolutions.
Your Excellencies, UNRWA is not seeking funds for
itself. These are funds to help Palestine refugees who are, generally
speaking, the poorest and most vulnerable of the Palestinians. In Gaza,
Lebanon and elsewhere they cry out for your support. Might this not be
an opportunity to show solidarity, through UNRWA? It would alleviate
suffering. It would send a strong signal of support in hard times. And
it would demonstrate the compassion and generosity of their fellow Arabs
towards those who, although they find themselves in dire need, are in
the front line of the Arab world’s struggle for recognition of its
rights and concerns.
Concluding reflections
Your Excellencies, with your support we will continue
striving to maintain and enhance our services and to advocate the cause
of Palestine refugees. Yet we harbour no illusions about the limits of
humanitarian activities – limits that are acutely evident from the
experience in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon. The work of UNRWA and
other humanitarian and development actors – indispensable as this may be
– must be complemented by courageous, creative, inclusive political
action to resolve the core causes of recurrent crises.
In the normal scheme of international affairs,
humanitarian work is meant to be temporary in nature. It is intended to
address human and human development needs and to nurture capacity for
self-reliance – not indefinitely – but on an interim basis, until such
time that conditions enable the beneficiaries to provide for themselves
and assume responsibility for their own destiny. In the case of
Palestinians and Palestine refugees, what should be transient threatens
to become indefinite. After fifty-nine years of humanitarian support to
Palestine refugees, the need to address Palestinian political
aspirations grows more urgent by the day. The fact that statehood
remains elusive is a source of immense frustration. It also fuels a
sense of dispossession and injustice that echoes throughout the region
and is cited as a pretext for extremist militancy.
Our close acquaintance with the situation convinces
us that real opportunities for positive change lie beneath the
challenges. In this regard, we applaud the involvement of Arab States as
a unifying force, encouraging reconciliation and pressing for the
compromises that are necessary to achieve a just and lasting peace.
Until this peace is achieved, we at UNRWA will press on with our role as
a reliable partner for the Arab League, never flagging in our service to
Palestine refugees.
Thank you.
|