Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Israel Slams EU for Claiming Settlements ‘Strangle PA Economy’


Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu Gov’t Slams EU, Backs Yesha

The Foreign Ministry has strongly criticized the European Union for charging that Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria are “strangling the Palestinian Authority economy" and turning the PA into a welfare state. The EU’s accusations were “completely unfounded,” the Foreign Ministry said, and prompted Senior Deputy Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Rafael Barak, to summon the head of the EU delegation to Israel, Ambassador Ramiro Cibrian Uzal.

“Political statements of this nature clearly fall outside the mandate of the ECTAO office in question, which is charged with a purely technical role in the channeling of assistance,” Barak said. “Even more troubling is the technical assistant's implication that Israeli security measures in the West Bank are unnecessary and even illegal, alongside a total failure to recognize that it is the continued activity of Palestinian terrorist groups which makes such measures an unfortunate necessity.”

He pointed out the EU criticism level against Israel ignored Israel’s destruction of dozens of Jewish communities in Judea, Samaria and Gaza and the expulsion of more than 10,000 Jews.

“The statement also chose to ignore the recent improvements in the…economy. Recent World Bank, IMF and Palestinian Ministry of Finance data point to significant improvement of the Palestinian economy, even during the current global financial crisis,” Barak added. “Indeed, official Palestinian data indicates that the West Bank has shown economic growth rates of five to seven percent in 2008.



“Ultimately, a vibrant, stable economy will be achieved through the resumption of negotiations between Israel and the PA. In the meantime, the European technical assistant would do well to concentrate his efforts on the tasks for which he is responsible, instead of making unfounded accusations against Israel.”

The Arab economy in Judea, Samaria and Gaza grew at an unprecedented rate from 1967, when the areas were restored to Israel during the Six Day War, until the Intifada (Arab uprising), guided by the late PLO chieftain Yasser Arafat. The ensuing Oslo War, also known as the Second Intifada, further crippled the Arab economy after Jewish employers and consumers were unable to work with Arabs without facing the risk of a terrorist attack. .

No comments: