Abbas seeks urgent aid on Saudi visit

Abbas seeks urgent aid on Saudi visit

JEDDAH - Agence France-Presse
Abbas seeks urgent aid on Saudi visit

Palestinian President Abbas (L) is seen during a meeting with Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz in Jeddah. EPA photo

Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas visited Saudi Arabia and met King Abdullah on July 13 to seek urgent aid for his administration as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan nears.

 The leaders, who met in the Red Sea city of Jeddah, discussed “the financial crisis of the Palestinian Authority (PA) which will no longer be able to pay its employees as Ramadan approaches,” the Palestinians’ top diplomat in Riyadh said.

 “President Abbas asked for the help of the Saudi kingdom which he thanked for its continued support to the Palestinians,” Jamal Shobaki told Agence France-Presse.

 He said they also discussed the stagnant Israeli-Palestinian peace process and Israel’s policy of building Jewish settlements on the occupied West Bank and in annexed east Jerusalem, a major obstacle to a resumption of peace negotiations.

 The PA’s debts have climbed to $1.5 billion, said Shobaki who, citing statistics from Prime Minister Salam Fayyad’s government, estimated $500 million was needed in urgent aid to tackle the current crisis. The Authority faces its worst financial crisis since it was founded in 1994, Palestinian labor minister Ahmed Majdalani said at the start of July, warning that donor countries were not honoring their pledges. Arab and other states have pledged around one billion dollars, of which the PA has received only $480 million, according to finance minister Nabil Qassis.

Middle East,