Abbas refuses tax revenues released by Israel

The Palestinian Authority president said he was rejecting the funds because Israel deducted one-third to cover the Palestinians’ debts for utilities and hospital bills.

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JERUSALEM (JTA) — Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas refused to accept its frozen tax revenues released by Israel.

Abbas said Sunday that he would not take the funds because Israel had deducted some of the money to cover the Palestinians’ debts for utilities and hospital bills.

Israel collects taxes for the Palestinians and then transfers the funds to the Palestinian Authority.

Israel withheld the collected tax revenues beginning in January after Abbas signed requests in late December to join the International Criminal Court and other international conventions as a result of the failure of the United Nations Security Council to pass a Palestinian statehood proposal.

The Palestinians are believed to owe millions of dollars to Israel for utilities, as well as for visits to Israeli hospitals, Reuters reported. Abbas said Israel had deducted one-third of the money owed to it.

“We are returning the money,” Abbas said. “Either they give it to us in full or we go to arbitration or to the (International Criminal) Court. We will not accept anything else.”

The P.A. said last week that its public employees would receive 60 percent of their salaries for the month of March, the Wafa Palestinian news and information agency reported, because Israel had not yet provided the frozen tax revenues.

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