The Palestinian Authority is mulling the possibility of declaring financial bankruptcy, Kan Reshet Bet, Israel’s Public Broadcasting service, reported on Wednesday.
The decision would entail the complete
closure of P.A. government offices, leading to possible instability in
Judea and Samaria, as the P.A. is the largest employer in the areas
under its control.
A large number of Palestinian security
personnel have already resigned and are looking for work in the private
sector, the news site reported. In recent months, they have been
receiving 80% of their salaries, and many have gone into debt, upon
which the banks close their accounts.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a Knesset panel recently that the P.A. would not be allowed to fail.
“We need the Palestinian Authority. We
cannot allow it to collapse. We also do not want it to collapse. We are
ready to help it financially. We have an interest in the P.A. continuing
to work. Where it succeeds in operating, it does the job for us. And we
have no interest in it falling,” said Netanyahu, according to Kan.
Tensions are already high in Judea and
Samaria, as the P.A. appears to have effectively lost control of
northern Samaria, and violence has increased dramatically.
More right-wing members of Netanyahu’s
coalition have called for a tougher military response following a string
of incidents, including a terror attack near the Samaria community of Eli
on June 20 that left four Israelis dead, and an Israeli military
operation that ran into tough resistance in Jenin, requiring the unusual
use of an Apache gunship to ensure soldiers’ safe extraction.
On Monday, two rockets were launched by terrorists in Jenin, though without warheads.
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