World Jewish News
Australia, Germany suspend World Vision funding over accusations of money diversion to Hamas
08.08.2016, Israel and the World Germany and Australia have suspended their donations to World Vision, a charity international organisation in Gaza, after Israel arrested a Hamas member, Mohammed el-Halabi, accused of siphoning off $7.2 million dollars from the organization to fund the Islamist group’s military wing.
Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) called Israel’s accusations “deeply troubling” and said in a statement that it was “urgently seeking more information from World Vision and the Israeli authorities.
‘’We are suspending the provision of further funding to World Vision for programs in the Palestinian Territories until the investigation is complete.”
There are “rigorous processes to investigate any report that aid funding has been misappropriated,” the statement said, and that Australia’s “aid to the Palestinian Territories is intended for humanitarian and development assistance to the Palestinian community. Any diversion of the generous support of the Australian and international community for military or terrorist purposes by Hamas is to be deplored and can only harm the Palestinian people.”
Australia has paid World Vision approximately $4.35 million over the past three fiscal years for the provision of aid in the Palestinian territories, a DFAT spokesman said.
World Vision announced that it will not receive funds from the German government because of the allegations Hamas misused funds, according to a report in the Berlin-based Tagesspiegel.
“The 3.6 million euro, which we received from the [German] Federal Development Ministry and [German] Foreign Affairs Ministry for new projects in the region will no longer be provided until the accusations are clarified,” said a spokeswoman for the World Vision.
Volker Beck, a German Green Party MP and head of the German-Israel parliamentary group in the Bundestag, said in a statement: “World Vision massively damages the trust necessary for aid work for the people in Gaza,” adding that “Hamas is a terrorist organization, which should not be financed with tax-payer funds.”
The paper reported that as much as 1.1 million euro from Germany was transferred to World Vision in Gaza since 2010.
Israel’s Foreign Ministry welcomed Australia and Germany’s suspension of funds.
Muhammad el-Halabi, World Vision’s manager of operations in Gaza, was arrested by Israel on June 15 while crossing the border into the enclave.
A senior Israeli security official said that Halabi, who has run the group’s Gaza operations since 2010, had been under extended surveillance and had confessed to siphoning off some $7.2 million a year to Hamas.
Former Shin Bet chief Avi Dichter, who heads the Knesset Defense Committee, said misuse of charity moneys runs much wider than World Vision’s tens of millions. He claimed that ‘‘almost 100%’’ of UN refugee workers in Gaza are Hamas members.
EJP
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