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MIDDLE EAST CRISIS

Sweden resumes aid to UN agency for Palestinians

Sweden said Saturday it was resuming aid to the cash-strapped UN agency for Palestinians with an initial disbursement of $20 million after receiving assurances of extra checks on its spending and personnel.

Sweden resumes aid to UN agency for Palestinians
The damaged Gaza City headquarters of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA). Photo: AFP.

Like several other countries, Sweden suspended aid to UNRWA after Israel accused about a dozen of its employees of involvement in the October 7 Hamas attack that sparked the conflict in Gaza.

“The government has allocated 400 million kronor to UNRWA for the year 2024. Today’s decision concerns a first payment of 200 million kronor,” the Swedish government said in a statement.

It said that to unblock the aid, UNRWA had agreed to “allow controls, independent audits, to strengthen internal supervision and extra controls of personnel.”

The Swedish move came after the European Commission earlier this month said it would release €50 million in UNRWA funding.

Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel resulted in about 1,160 deaths, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Israel’s retaliatory operations in Hamas-controlled Gaza have killed more than 30,800 people, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry.

The amount of aid brought into Gaza by truck has plummeted during five months of war.

UNRWA is at the centre of efforts to provide humanitarian relief in Gaza, where the United Nations has warned repeatedly of looming famine after nearly five months of Israeli bombardment.

UNRWA employs around 30,000 people in the occupied Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria — with about 13,000 staff in the Gaza Strip.

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SWEDEN AND ISRAEL

Sweden boosts security for Israeli interests after gunfire near embassy

Sweden was strengthening security measures for Israeli and Jewish interests in the country after gunfire near Israel's embassy in Stockholm, police said on Friday.

Sweden boosts security for Israeli interests after gunfire near embassy

Police sealed off the area around the embassy and carried out searches in several Stockholm neighbourhoods after hearing gunshots in the early hours of Friday morning.

“Due to suspected shots near Israel’s embassy in Stockholm, the police are taking security measures (to protect) Israeli and Jewish property and interests across the country,” the police department announced on its website.

Israel’s ambassador to Sweden Ziv Nevo Kulman thanked the authorities on X “for their immediate reaction and investigation, and for enhancing the security measures around our embassy and around the Jewish communities”.

The gunfire comes after Sweden’s intelligence service revealed in February that an investigation into a foiled attack on the Israeli embassy in Stockholm was being probed as a potential “terrorist crime.”

Police were called to the embassy on January 31st after a “dangerous object” was discovered on its grounds, which the national bomb squad destroyed after determining it was “live”.

Police declined to comment on the precise nature of the object, but media reported it was a hand grenade.

“The preliminary investigation launched by the Swedish Police Authority on January 31st, following the discovery of a dangerous object at the Israeli Embassy in Stockholm, has been taken over by the Swedish Security Service,” the service said in a statement.

“In connection with this, the criminal classification has been changed to a terrorist crime,” it added.

More to follow…

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