UN schools for Palestinians defy US funding cuts, open on time

Palestinians depend on the UNRWA to get by outside their homeland, in countries that treat them as second-class residents with only limited rights.

2 min read
04 September, 2018
UNRWA schools for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon started the new school year on time [Facebook]

United Nations schools for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon started the new school year on time on Monday, despite the US decision to cancel funding to the international body's Palestinian relief agency (UNRWA).

Students arrived at the Haifa Intermediate School in Beirut's Bir Hassan neighbourhood on Monday and sat through their first language, history, and math lessons of the year.

Claudio Cordone, director of UNRWA affairs in Lebanon, called it a "joyful day", and called on donor nations to fill the deficit left behind by the US decision announced Friday.

It was a day many thought would not come, at least not on time, as UNRWA faces some of its toughest pressures in its 68-year history.

US President Donald Trump's administration, encouraged by Israel, has expressed deep scepticism over the agency's mission to provide education and social services to over 5 million Palestinian refugees across the Middle East.

The UNRWA was founded in 1949 to serve some 700,000 Palestinians who were uprooted from their homes in the war to create Israel.

Palestinians depend on the UNRWA to get by outside their homeland, in countries that treat them as second-class residents with only limited rights.

The agency relies on the US for 30 percent of its budget. But the Trump administration on Friday called UNRWA an "irredeemably flawed operation" and halted $300 million in planned donations on the grounds that it is an obstacle to a settlement between Palestinians and Israel, something the agency strongly rejects.

"Today we can express our deep regret over the announcement from the US that it will not fund the agency after decades of support. And we reject the criticism that the UNRWA schools and its health centers and its emergency assistance program is plagued by defects, and that they cannot be reformed," said Cordone.

He said the agency was facing a $217 million deficit.

Rawan al-Hassan, a pupil, said students were acutely aware of the budgetary situation.

"We are happy, it’s the first day of school, we're going to see our friends again. But we’re not very happy because they’re saying that the books are not good. They're preparing us because there’s nothing good for us," said Hassan.