Advertisement

U.N. denies Hamas influences aid

Palestinian workers use natural clay to build a Hamas police station in the Gaza district of Beit Lahia on July 22, 2009. No building material has entered Gaza since the blockade started after Hamas came to power there. More than six months since the end of an Israeli military onslaught which killed hundreds of Palestinians and destroyed or damaged thousands of homes and all police stations, construction materials which are prevented to enter the Gaza by Israeli authorities, crippling the reconstruction efforts after the recent war. (UPI Photo/Ismael Mohamad)
1 of 3 | Palestinian workers use natural clay to build a Hamas police station in the Gaza district of Beit Lahia on July 22, 2009. No building material has entered Gaza since the blockade started after Hamas came to power there. More than six months since the end of an Israeli military onslaught which killed hundreds of Palestinians and destroyed or damaged thousands of homes and all police stations, construction materials which are prevented to enter the Gaza by Israeli authorities, crippling the reconstruction efforts after the recent war. (UPI Photo/Ismael Mohamad) | License Photo

JERUSALEM, July 24 (UPI) -- A U.N. spokesman Friday denied Israeli newspaper reports indicating Hamas was taking control of humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Maariv reported John Ging, the director of United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, was forced to flee after refusing to cooperate with Hamas.

Advertisement

U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq told the daily U.N. press briefing Ging did not "flee."

"The Hamas de facto government has no influence whatsoever on who receives assistance from UNRWA and it has respected the independence of UNRWA," Haq said.

Days after Ging's departure, Hamas warned in a local newspaper anyone failing to comply with Hamas' instructions should leave Gaza, the official said.

Maariv said Hamas, which uses violence against organizations that are unwilling to cooperate, wants to clear all humanitarian assistance. The official said approximately $20 million in aid is sent to Gaza each month.

Israel's security establishment has expressed growing concern and a document compiled by the Defense Ministry outlines attempts by Hamas to steal funds allocated for humanitarian assistance, Maariv said.

The document, distributed to the Finance Ministry, Foreign Ministry, Israeli intelligence and organizations in the United States, warned funds allocated to rebuild Gaza following Operation Cast Lead could fall into the hands of Hamas.

Advertisement

The official said Hamas has already taken control of millions transferred by the Palestinian Authority to rebuild Gaza.

Latest Headlines