Palestinians: US cuts to Arab hospitals will have dire effect on healthcare
$25 million funding being withdrawn by US covers 40% of costs in six East Jerusalem hospitals that treat West Bank and Gaza patients
The director of an East Jerusalem hospital said Sunday that a US decision to cut funding to hospitals serving the Palestinians will have a “severe effect.”
Bassem Abu Libdeh, of the Makassed hospital, said that the US currently covers 40 percent of costs in six East Jerusalem hospitals that provide care for Palestinians from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
The Trump administration announced on Saturday it was cutting $25 million funding from the East Jerusalem Hospital Network, saying it would redirect the money toward “high-priority projects elsewhere.”
The fresh cuts mark the third week in a row the US has slashed financial support for the Palestinians and come a day after US President Donald Trump said American aid will be withheld until a peace deal is reached with Israel.
The network, which is made up of six hospitals in East Jerusalem, provides healthcare such as cancer treatment and operations for Palestinians to whom such medical assistance is unavailable in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, according to the World Health Organization.
The decision to slash the aid for the hospitals, which has yet to be formally announced by the State Department, came despite a Congressional exemption included in legislation passed in March that reduces funding to the Palestinian Authority over stipends it pays to terrorists and other security prisoners and their families.
The PA’s minister for Jerusalem Affairs said the latest cuts were “not surprising at all” and vowed the Palestinians would not bend.
“Let America know that all these acts will not change our position toward our cause one bit. On the contrary, it consolidates our positions toward every issue, including Jerusalem,” Adnan Husseini told NPR.
The PA has boycotted the Trump administration and rebuffed its peace efforts since the US president’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in December of last year. The Palestinians claim East Jerusalem — which Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 Six Day War and later annexed — as the capital of their future state.
The decision to cut funding for the East Jerusalem hospitals was made Thursday, the Haaretz daily reported, and came despite the opposition of Christian groups that support some of the medical centers.
Dave Harden, a former American official who headed USAID’s work in the West Bank and Gaza under the Obama administration, said the cuts were “particularly vindictive” and warned they could cause the “collapse” of the Augusta Victoria Hospital and the St. John’s Eye Hospital, two of the medical centers in the East Jerusalem network.
Addendum 3. This decision could cause the collapse of these two respected hospitals serving the Palestinian community. These hospitals also worked very closely w Hadassah hospitals and Share Shadeck hospitals in West Jerusalem.
— Dave Harden (@Dave_Harden) September 7, 2018
Last Friday, the US announced it would end all funding to the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA, and the previous week cut over $200 million in aid for the West Bank and Gaza.
None of the cuts, however, directly targeted aid meant for the internationally recognized PA, which last month received some $42 million in frozen funds for security cooperation with Israel.
Though hailed by Israeli politicians, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the cuts are said to be opposed by defense officials, who fear they could fuel Palestinian unrest and in turn jeopardize Israel’s security.
In a phone call Thursday with Jewish leaders ahead of Rosh Hashanah, Trump said he would only resume aid to the Palestinians if they agree to a deal with Israel.
“I stopped massive amounts of money that we were paying to the Palestinians and the Palestinian leaders. We were — the United States was paying them tremendous amounts of money,” he said during the call. “And I’d say, you’ll get money, but we’re not paying you until we make a deal. If we don’t make a deal, we’re not paying. And that’s going to have a little impact.
“I don’t think it’s disrespectful at all” for US aid to be utilized as a bargaining chip, the president added. Rather, “I think it’s disrespectful when people don’t come to the table.”
Trump also reiterated that his recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital took the issue “off the table” and expressed optimism a peace deal could be reached.