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Palestinian Authority continues terror payments despite promises to EU

European Union representatives confronted PA officials with evidence they continue to transfer funds to terrorists.

Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas hosts French President Emmanuel Macron in Ramallah, Samaria, on Jan. 22, 2020. Photo by STR via Flash90.
Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas hosts French President Emmanuel Macron in Ramallah, Samaria, on Jan. 22, 2020. Photo by STR via Flash90.

(Israel Hayom) The European Union is changing its approach toward the Palestinian Authority. In a meeting with senior PA officials toward the end of last month, senior EU officials who are friendly to Israel raised the issue of the PA’s violation of agreements regarding continued payments to terrorists, and demanded that they stop transferring funds to those who carried out attacks against Israelis and Jews.

During discussions in Brussels ahead of the meeting of the Palestine Donor Group, in which many European countries participate, the PA’s progress in implementing the structural reforms it committed to was examined.

During the discussions, several EU representatives confronted PA representatives with evidence that they continued to transfer funds to terrorists through alternative channels, and expressed dissatisfaction with the violation of the commitment.

The officials stressed that the transfer of some of the funds sent to the PA is conditional on fulfillment of Palestinian commitments to stop paying salaries and stipends to terrorists and their families. The PA once more promised in February to stop the flow of funds to terrorists and their families, but in recent months, it has been reported that payments were transferred by alternative means.

In Israel, it was further revealed that the PA changed the payment mechanism to one based on socioeconomic criteria, rather than on the number of years of imprisonment, as was the case in the past. This change led to the cessation of payments to some terrorists in prisons, but not to all, and thus continued payment to terrorists and their families.

The EU, which is the largest financial donor to the PA, has conditioned its financial support, amounting to hundreds of millions of euros per year, on the implementation of comprehensive reforms in the PA. The EU awarded the PA a grant of between €1.2 billion and €1.6 billion (between $1.4 billion and $1.87 billion) for the years 2025-2027, subject to the gradual implementation of reforms, whose main focus is fighting corruption and building stable and proper governance.

The conditions of EU aid include a Palestinian commitment to stop paying salaries and stipends to terrorists as a reward for attacks they carried out, as well as stopping incitement in textbooks that the PA distributes to Palestinian educational institutions. In recent months, it was revealed in Israel Hayom that Palestinian textbooks continue to incite against Israel and Jews, and encourage terrorism.

The PA prefers to postpone the implementation of the education reform to next year, although, after it became clear that it is not keeping its promises, pro-Israel officials in the EU are expected to increase the pressure for change.

Was supposed to be implemented

In response to the accusations against them, senior PA officials claimed that in January, the new payment system was supposed to be implemented, which would create transparency, and payments to terrorists would stop. The PA also fired the finance minister after accusing him of transferring the funds.

According to a spokesperson for the European Commission, the step the Palestinians took to stop payment to terrorists “was a step forward and marked the PA’s commitment to implement far-reaching reforms. However, we understand that a payment was recently made to prisoners’ families under a previous plan. We very much regret this decision, as it appears to contradict previous statements.

“We requested clarifications on the matter from the PA, and the Committee for the Promotion of Palestinian Policy provided the opportunity to discuss the matter openly. The PA reaffirmed its commitment to fully implement the Social Protection Law and also confirmed that a contract has been signed for an audit of the new payment system, which is expected to begin in January. Within this framework, verification will be carried out to assess that there are no parallel payment programs and to provide evidence that the system is now based only on genuine needs,” the spokesperson said.

The EU confirmed again that it continues to monitor the PA’s promise regarding education reform. “Reform in the education sector, including curriculum reform, is part of the EU-Palestine reform agenda,” added a spokesperson on behalf of the commission.

“The PA, as reaffirmed in President [Mahmoud] Abbas’s intervention in New York in September, is committed to conducting a comprehensive curriculum reform to ensure full compliance of all learning materials with UNESCO standards containing values of peace, tolerance, coexistence and nonviolence. This includes changes in the textbooks in question.”

Two weeks ago, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar revealed that the PA had nearly doubled salaries to terrorists and their family members in the past year. According to him, in 2024 it paid 470 million shekels ($130 million), and in 2025 it had already committed to pay about 700 million shekels ($194 million) in salaries.

“I call on Europe and the world to hold the PA accountable for financing terrorism. The salaries to terrorists must be stopped now,” Sa’ar said.

Originally published by Israel Hayom.

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