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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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October 2, 2018
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Palestinian
Leaders Dig In Over Payments to Terrorists
by IPT News • Oct 2, 2018 at 1:39
pm
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Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Qadri Abu Bakr, who
directs the Palestine Liberation Organization's Commission of Prisoners'
Affairs, recently issued a defiantly assurance that they won't end payments
to terrorists and their families despite international pressure.
Bakr "emphasized that the leadership ... will continue to support
the resolve of the prisoners and their families and will not succumb to the
Israeli and American pressures calling to stop the Martyrs' (Shahids)
and prisoners' salaries (rawatib) and allowances (mukhassasat),"
reports the official PA daily Al-Hayat Al Jadida and translated by Palestinian Media Watch (PMW).
Bakr's sentiment mirrors Abbas'.
"By Allah, even if we have only a penny left it will only be spent
on the families of the Martyrs and the prisoners, and only afterwards will
it be spent on the rest of the people," Abbas said on official PA TV
in July, adding that "martyrs and prisoners" are "stars in
the sky" and that these terrorists "have priority in everything."
These statements reaffirm that Palestinians convicted of attacking
Israelis take precedent over all over sectors of Palestinian society. In
fact, terrorists and their families receive far higher payments than welfare recipients.
The amount of money paid to imprisoned or released terrorists depends on
the length of sentence, which is a function of an action's severity. The
more brutal the attack or murder, the more money a Palestinian prisoner receives.
Last month, the PA rushed to transfer rushed to transfer roughly $3,300 to
the family of terrorist Khalil Jabarin, who killed American-Israeli citizen
Ari Fuld in a stabbing attack.
Despite growing international pressure to halt this practice, roughly half of the foreign aid that the PA receives is
allocated for payments to terrorist inmates and the "families of
martyrs."
The Palestinian government spends $355 million annually on terrorist
salaries, about 7.5 percent of the PA's budget, a PMW analysis shows.
This form of Palestinian incitement is one of the main reasons the Trump administration has taken specific measures
against the Palestinian Liberation Organization in recent weeks. In
mid-September, the administration revoked residency permits for the family of the PLO's
envoy to the United States and reportedly shut down all PLO bank accounts in the country. The White House
announced the closure of the PLO office in Washington a week earlier.
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