International donors to meet in Paris for Palestine aid push

By Xinhua

Paris : International donors are set to meet here Monday to pledge their financial support to Palestinians, a key follow-up to the newly re-launched peace process between Palestine and Israel.


Support TwoCircles

Representatives from more than 90 countries and international organizations are expected to attend the one-day meeting, the largest international donors’ conference since Paris held a similar one more than a decade ago, according to the French foreign ministry.

The conference will bring together the world’s major players in the Middle East peace process, including the UN, Russia, the European Union (EU) and the US, the so-called Middle East quartet.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, the EU High Representative for Foreign Policy Javier Solana and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice are among the high-profile participants in the meeting.

The Palestinian delegation, led by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, is seeking $5.6 billion in aid for the next three years to relieve economic hardship in Palestine, based on a development plan produced by the acting Palestinian government in West Bank.

Abbas has been confident that the ambitious goal could be reached at the Paris conference. His planning minister Samir Abdullah said ahead of the meeting that the international community is expected to show “full support” to their appeal.

Till now, Washington is said to pledge more than $500 million, while Britain and Germany may be ready to provide $500 million and $289 million (200 million euros) respectively. France, the host, has not disclosed how much the country is going to pay.

Abdullah said he also expected Arab countries could be generous in supporting Palestine at the conference.

Of the billions of dollars, 70 percent will be first used to fill up the huge budget deficit of the Palestinian government, with the remaining used for development, the minister said.

Aside from aid pledges, the conference is designed as an important platform to give political impetus to the peace process between Palestine and Israel, which was renewed last month at an international meeting hosted by the US in Annapolis, Maryland.

After seven years of diplomatic deadlock and continuous violence, Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert agreed to negotiate a peace treaty before the end of 2008 at their Annapolis meeting.

The Middle East quartet is also scheduled to meet on the sidelines of the conference, which will be opened by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and co-chaired by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, peace envoy for the quartet.

SUPPORT TWOCIRCLES HELP SUPPORT INDEPENDENT AND NON-PROFIT MEDIA. DONATE HERE