Washington, D.C. – On Feb. 14, a coalition of over 50 civil society organizations from the U.S., including the Charity & Security Network (C&SN), sent a letter to President Biden urging the administration to restore funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). The letter was organized by the Friends Committee on National Legislation and the Center for International Policy.

UNRWA provides humanitarian assistance, health, and education services to around 5.6 million Palestinian refugees registered with the agency within Gaza, East Jerusalem, the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. Due to recent allegations made by Israel that 12 UNRWA employees took part in the Oct. 7 attack, several top donors to UNRWA, including the U.S., U.K., Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, and others, have suspended funding to the agency, which relies almost entirely on ad hoc funding through voluntary contributions. These funding suspensions occurred despite the allegations remaining unsubstantiated by Israel. 

By refusing to continue to fund the UNRWA organization as a whole, which employs over 13,000 individuals and is integral to the humanitarian operations in Gaza, the U.S. risks the lives of the 2 million recipients of UNRWA’s services in Gaza who are reliant on UNRWA operations for their survival.

The letter echoes numerous statements issued from civil society around the world expressing outrage that donors have suspended funding to essential humanitarian efforts in Gaza. The Norwegian Refugee Council called it a “reckless decision to cut a lifeline for an entire population,” and immediately issued a joint statement signed by 25 other international organizations, including Oxfam, Refugees International, Save the Children, and Norwegian People’s Aid. C&SN also highlighted the disastrous consequences of halting funding and expressing its support for UNRWA.

Below is the text of the letter sent to Biden:

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Mr. President:

We are non-governmental organizations supporting the protection of civilians in the conflict in the Occupied Gaza Strip and writing to urge you to restore funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

After nearly four months of conflict which has devastated Gaza’s infrastructure and dangerously reduced essential supplies, hundreds of thousands of civilians – the vast majority of them children and women – are displaced and at grave risk of starvation and deadly disease. UNRWA is the most significant direct provider of humanitarian aid in the territory, with more than two million Palestinian civilians relying on it for critical necessities and services. UNRWA and its staff have gone to heroic lengths to continue aid operations even after catastrophic damage to many of its facilities and the death of more than 150 of their colleagues since the start of the current hostilities.

Twelve individuals among the 13,000 people UNRWA employed in the territory at the start of the current fighting are accused of taking part in Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attack on Israel. UNRWA, which has categorically and repeatedly condemned the attack, swiftly terminated the contracts of those accused. UNRWA’s Commissioner-General has requested the investigation of these employees be overseen by the highest investigative authority at the UN, while the UN Secretary General made it clear the Secretariat will cooperate with a competent authority to prosecute the individuals. This is in addition to UNRWA’s January 17, 2024 announcement that it is commissioning an independent review of staff guidelines and procedures to ensure that all staff adhere to humanitarian principles.

Continuing to suspend assistance to UNRWA for the alleged actions of individuals that UNRWA itself condemns and has pledged to help investigate is not only unjust, but detrimental to your administration’s goal of ending the current humanitarian crisis. Denying resources to UNRWA will only deepen the deprivation faced by civilians in Gaza, helping to spread rather than fight starvation and disease.

We therefore urge you to immediately restore US funding to UNRWA and to work with it and other aid agencies to urgently end the growing humanitarian catastrophe in the territory.

Signed,

Action Corps

Alliance of Baptists

American Friends Service Committee 

Americans for Peace Now

Amnesty International USA

Brooklyn For Peace

Carolina Peace Center 

Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC)

Center for Economic and Policy Research

Center for International Policy

Center for Jewish Nonviolence

Center for Victims of Torture

Charity & Security Network

Church World Service

Churches for Middle East Peace (CMEP)

CommonDefense.us

Demand Progress Education Fund

Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN)

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA)

Extend

Freedom Forward 

Friends Committee on National Legislation (FCNL)

Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect

Global Ministries of the Christian Church (Disicples of Christ) and United Church of Christ

Grassroots International

Humanity & Inclusion

International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN)

Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ)

Just Foreign Policy

MADRE

Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

Mennonite Centeral Committee U.S.

Middle East Democracy Center (MEDC)

Migrant Roots Media

Minnesota Peace Project

MPower Change 

National Council of Churches

National Iranian American Council (NIAC)

New Hampshire Peace Action

Nonviolent Peaceforce

Peace Action 

Presbyterian Church (USA), Office of Public Witness

RootsAction.org

September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas – Justice Team

Sojourners

The Episcopal Church

The Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy (TIMEP)

Truman Center for National Policy

Unitarian Universalist Association

United for Peace and Justice

UNRWA USA National Committee

Win Without War

Women for Weapons Trade Transparency

World BEYOND War

Yemen Relief and Reconstruction Foundation 

Zomia Center