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EU Aid for Gaza

DW staff (nda)January 26, 2009

The European Commission announced Monday, Jan. 26, that it was providing 58 million euros ($74.3 million) in humanitarian aid to vulnerable Palestinians this year.

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Palestinians inspect the damage at a building following Israeli military operations, in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City
The EU will be providing millions in humanitarian aid to help rebuild GazaImage: AP

In a statement, EU Aid Commissioner Louis Michel said around 32 million euros would be earmarked for Gaza, which suffered massive damage during a three-week bombing campaign by Israel.

An additional 20 million euros are to go to the West Bank, with the remaining six million destined for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon.

"This funding package of 58 million euros will contribute substantially to the international effort on behalf of these suffering people and will also sustain our ongoing solidarity with the entire Palestinian population," Michel said.

Calling the situation in Gaza "catastrophic," he said the strip's civilian population of nearly 1.5 million had faced "terrible and unprecedented" suffering compared to past times of violence in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

"Destruction on such a massive scale saddens me deeply," Michel said during a fact-finding visit to the Gaza Strip.

EU commissioner distributes responsibility equally

European Union Commissioner for Development Louis Michel
The EU's Michel blamed Israel and Hamas equallyImage: AP

Michel sharply criticized Israel for the massive destruction he saw around him, but said also Hamas bore an "overwhelming" part of the blame.

"We have to also recall the overwhelming responsibility of Hamas," Michel told local reporters as he toured Jabaliya, a crowded refugee camp north of Gaza City which was hit hard in Israel's 22-day offensive.

"Firing rockets at civilians is a terrorist action," he said. "I intentionally say this here, Hamas is a terrorist movement and it has to be denounced as such," he said.

He earlier strongly condemned Israel for its destruction of the civilian infrastructure, as he inspected buildings in Gaza destroyed in the Israeli assault, including an ice-cream, a cookie and a soft-drink factory.

He said the destruction pointed at an obvious violation of international humanitarian law.

But the 61-year-old Belgian, normally known as a staunch critic of Israel, added that for progress in the peace process to be possible, Hamas had to accept two "small conditions" -- recognize Israel's right to exist and to abandon armed struggle.

EU offering to help stop smuggling

Hamas security forces are seen on a truck
The EU wants to help stop Hamas rearming after the warImage: AP

Meanwhile, EU foreign ministers met in Brussels to discuss ways of helping Israel counter arms smuggling destined for Hamas into the Gaza Strip and ensure that the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas holds.

Ministers were expected to call on Hamas to halt its rocket launches, ask Israel to reopen border crossings into Gaza and discuss an "effective mechanism to prevent the smuggling of arms and ammunition" to the strip, diplomats said.

France on Friday announced that it was dispatching a helicopter- carrying frigate to the Gaza coast, while Britain has said its Royal Navy would also be prepared to help.

Meanwhile, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in Brussels that his country would send five experts with special equipment to help Egypt uncover the tunnels allegedly used to smuggle arms into Gaza.

However, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit said in Brussels late Sunday that most of the arms smuggling was taking place by sea and not through his territory.

Abul Gheit was attending talks with EU foreign ministers and counterparts from the Palestinian Authority, Turkey, Jordan and Norway as part of a diplomatic push by the EU to make its voice heard in the region.

On Wednesday, EU diplomats held separate talks with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who insisted on the need to stop weapons being smuggled into the strip.

EU foreign-policy chief Javier Solana has also offered to redeploy monitors which used to patrol the Rafah crossing between 2005 and 2007.