Raiders trading Khalil Mack to Bears, per reports

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Raiders trading Khalil Mack to Bears, per reports

Mack, 27, has been engaged in a holdout with Oakland and it began looking more and more likely that the team would choose to deal him.

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USA TODAY

The Oakland Raiders are set to trade three-time Pro Bowl pass rusher Khalil Mack to the Chicago Bears, according to multiple reports Saturday morning.

Mack, 27, has been engaged in a holdout with Oakland and it began looking more and more likely that the team would choose to deal him.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapaport reports the Bears are giving up two first-round picks in the deal and that Chicago will work out a long-term deal with Mack larger than that of Aaron Donald – who yesterday became the highest-paid defensive player in the league.

More: NFL roster cut tracker: Which players are being released?

Mack, the fifth overall selection in the 2014 draft, was the defensive player of the year in 2016 and a two-time all-pro selection. He has 40 1/2 career sacks.

His departure leaves an already thin Oakland defense without its cornerstone. The Raiders ranked 23rd overall and 26th against the pass in 2017, and 10 1/2 of the unit’s 31 sacks came from Mack.

In Chicago, he joins a defense that ranked in the top 10 in both points and yards allowed last year but lacked star power in its edge rush. 

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Premier League team news – watch Final Score

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Saturday’s live Premier League action – Live – BBC Sport


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Summary

  1. Watch Final Score – online from 14:30 BST, BBC One from 16:00 BST (not in Scotland)
  2. Listen to Chelsea v Bournemouth on 5 live & online – Willian & Lerma start
  3. Everton make four changes, inc. debut for Digne
  4. Zaha not in Palace squad to face Southampton
  5. Wolves unchanged at West Ham, who bring in Cresswell


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Bosnia and Herzegovina is Andalusia in the making

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Rule number one of border changes in the Western Balkans is that they are always about Bosnia and Herzegovina.

As the presidents of Kosovo and Serbia, Hashim Thaci and Aleksandar Vucic, are seeking the support of the EU for a “land swap” between their respective countries, one should keep in mind that talk of partition – because this is what it really is – of Kosovo is not about Kosovo, but about Bosnia and Herzegovina. 

It is somewhat ironic that Thaci and Vucic have openly broached the issue of border changes between Kosovo and Serbia on the anniversary of another attempt to carve out Bosnia and Herzegovina. 

In August 1939, the prime minister of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Dragisa Cvetkovic, and leading Croat politician Vladko Macek reached a deal whereby Bosnia and Herzegovina ceased to exist as a distinct political and administrative entity, with the autonomous region of Croatia annexing roughly one-third of it and the Serbian region keeping the rest. The deal is known as the Cvetkovic-Macek agreement. 

When asked after World War II about the status accorded to the Muslim population of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the deal, Macek – who is lionised in present-day Croatia as a great statesman – responded: “We agreed, when it comes to Bosnia and Muslims, to regard Muslims as if they don’t exist. And that is how we acted.”  

Whereas border changes in the Western Balkans were deemed unthinkable just a few years back, what is colloquially known as the international community seems now to be falling in line behind the Thaci-Vucic experiment. US National Security Adviser John Bolton stated recently that “Washington would not weigh in on an idea to swap territory between Serbia and Kosovo.”

Statements by EU Enlargement Commissioner Johannes Hahn also seem to reflect this attitude. “They need to find a solution, we will look into it with an open mind. But above all, it must contribute to regional stability and the EU path of both,” he recently said

This change in position on land swaps in the Western Balkans basically means that the EU has decided to throw 20 years of its engagement efforts in the region out the window.

The problem is that it is doing so at a time when trouble is brewing. Whatever the details of the deal between Thaci and Vucic, part of it seems to be about Kosovo becoming a member-state of the United Nations. 

But only a few weeks ago, the president of the Bosnian Serb majority entity in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Milorad Dodik, said that if Kosovo is recognised by the UN and other international institutions, Bosnian Serbs will “also seek a chair” at the UN; in other words, they will pursue independence. 

This is not just empty talk. Dodik has been a Russian client for a long time. Russia, for its part, “is actively supporting indigenous political and paramilitary actors seeking to divide Bosnia and Herzegovina”, aiming to prevent the entire region from deeper integration with the West. The Russian government has been arming its police for the past few years. 

Dodik openly flaunts his ideas of secession of half of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Republika Srpska plus the town of Brcko which amounts to half of the country) and regularly refers to the entity of Republika Srpska as “the second Serb state in the Balkans”.

Over the years, he has spent millions of dollars on lobbying in Washington with the aim of breaking the consensus within the US political elite on the inviolability of Bosnian borders. A “land swap” between Kosovo and Serbia would give him the precedent he needs to pursue his secessionist goals. 

Bosnia’s other neighbour, Croatia, also has a stake in pushing for border changes in the Balkans. It has a history of pursuing the annexation of territories in Bosnia and Herzegovina with bloody policies.

In the 1990s, Croatia established a proxy “state” on Bosnian territory which pursued the creation of Greater Croatia through a brutal policy of mass murder, concentration camps and the systematic use of Muslims as forced labourers.

The political class in Croatia is completely unapologetic about it, as it is about the nation’s dark history of collaborating with the Nazis during World War II and aiding in the genocide of Jews, Roma and Serbian communists.

In addition, over the past several years, the Croatian society at large – abetted by senior figures in the Catholic Church – has been re-discovering its identity as a “cultural borderland”, defending Europe from an imagined “Islamic onslaught”. 

Both Serbia and Croatia are intensively arming. Croatia purchased Israeli F-16s, whereas Serbia obtained Russian MiG-29s. Both the Croatian and Serbian media continuously slander Bosnian Muslims and misrepresent the country as the “ISIL heartland” of Europe.

Most recently one of the leading Serbian media outlets aired a map of the region with half of Bosnia and Herzegovina depicted as part of Serbia.

The single most important lesson of the 1990s is that there is nothing manageable about border changes in the Balkans. Attempts to change the borders have always been followed by bloodshed. By endorsing the Thaci-Vucic adventure, the EU and the US have signed off on another Balkan disaster.

Once the Kosovo precedent is set, both Serb and Croat nationalists are going to turn their gaze on Bosnia and Herzegovina and its Muslim population. In other words, Bosnia and Herzegovina and its Muslims are quickly moving from Andalusia in the waiting to Andalusia in the making. 

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance. 

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England v India: ‘He took it like a circus juggler’ – Alastair Cook edges to slip for 12

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England opener Alastair Cook edges India’s Jasprit Bumrah to slip to fall for 12 on day three of the fourth Test at Southampton.

FOLLOW LIVE: England v India, fourth Test, day three – in-play clips, radio and text

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Available to UK users only.

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Residents of Jeju island offer helping hand to the Yemenis

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Jeju, South Korea – When Cristina arrived on South Korea’s Jeju island last December, she thought the move from Anyang, just outside capital Seoul, would help her catch up on life after a busy decade.

Working with the migrant community in Seoul, Cristina’s organisation wanted to expand into other parts of the country. Jeju, a tourist destination with a visa-free policy in order to boost tourism, had migrants who might have needed help, Cristina thought before relocating.

“When I first came to Jeju, I thought there wasn’t much work to do here. It’s a small island, not too many people and I will be able to get some rest too,” Cristina, who is from Romania, told Al Jazeera in her refugee shelter at the Naomi Centre.

“But then God sent me so many people. I don’t get any rest now and there are no off days. God sent me here to help these Yemeni refugees.”

More than 550 Yemeni nationals have arrived on the island since April, seeking asylum and refugee status. The government has barred them from leaving the island and entering mainland Korea.

Although they are allowed to work, the opportunities are limited to washing dishes at restaurants, fish farming or fishing at sea. They are often subject to long hours of manual labour, resulting in injuries and health issues. There have also been reported cases of assault at work and non-payment of wages.

South Korea’s refugee acceptance rate stands at around four percent. The Yemenis’ arrival, mostly from Malaysia – to which they fled war-torn Yemen – sparked an online outcry and protests on the island, as well as Seoul.

The island has a population of around 600,000 and a recent survey of 500 islanders revealed 90 percent felt insecure about going outside since the Yemenis’ arrival.

Most of the Koreans protesting and calling on the government to deport the asylum seekers have never met a Yemeni. But an increase in fake news has inflamed an anti-Islam sentiment among the Koreans, driving protests and forcing the government to take Yemen off the visa-free list and also tweak its refugee policy.

The Yemenis arrived on the island with limited cash, unsure of how they would survive and what their future would look like. Without jobs, and with their movements restricted, almost all of them were staring into the unknown, fearing the worst – being homeless – when the cash runs out.

Lee Jung-hoon is a 65-year-old Jeju resident who has given shelter to five Yemenis, providing them food and teaching them the Korean language on a daily basis. 

Cristina has been working in South Korea for a decade now [Faras Ghani/Al Jazeera]

“As far as I know, nobody is sleeping on the streets now because people who have nowhere to go can get help from NGOs or some locals who are willing to help out,” said Jung-hoon, flanked by three of the young Yemenis he is helping out.

Ammar, one of the refugees Jung-hoon helped out, found a job at a fish farm on Jeju. But the work was not easy.

“I worked from 5am to midnight. I only got four hours of sleep. I developed some health issues because of the lack of sleep and the hard labour. And that forced me to quit,” added Ammar, his Arabic translated into English by Azzam, 20, who wants to finish off the business administration degree he was pursing in Sanaa, Yemen’s capital.


READ MORE: How Islamophobia is driving anti-refugee sentiment in Korea


Pastor Jung-hoon added that some refugees were still living in hotel, but would be needing shelter soon as they will be running out of money.

“I’m working with some other people and we have around 60 Yemenis in a shelter. We’re planning a bigger one where we can house 100 of them. We’ve also asked Jeju’s mayor for help. And despite all the anti-Islam sentiment that we see, there are many, many locals coming out to help these refugees.”

A few kilometres away, Mohammad Salem takes a break from his interpretation job at a refugee assistance centre. When he arrived in May, with his wife and his newborn kid, Salem had just $2,000 in his pocket.

After three weeks of stay at a hotel, and spending on food, he had difficulty sleeping, fearing the family would be forced to sleep on the streets after the money runs out. 

Azzam wants to go to Seoul and finish off his undergraduate degree [Faras Ghani/Al Jazeera]

“I did some research about organisations helping out on the island and was lucky enough to find Cristina’s contact,” said Salem, sighing as he remembered the anxious days and nights prior to that.

“She was like an angel that came down from the sky to help us. She found us a local couple who gave us a room in their house. This was just two days before we would’ve been kicked out of the hotel.

“We’ve been with the Korean family for two months now. They buy food and toys for my son. They are like my parents now.”

Cristina, meanwhile, remembers the first Yemeni who came to her for help. Now, she says she has helped more than 200 others, and also assisted other NGOs with their requirements – shelter, food, medicine, health checkups and other commodities.

“There are so many people coming forward and offering help. Some offer shelter, others offer money and some are helping out with food. The NGOs contact me and tell me what they need and I can then help out accordingly.”

She was like an angel that came down from the sky to help us

Mohammad Salem, Yemeni asylum seeker

Back at the church, pastor Jung-hoon resumes the Korean language class, impressed by his students’ ability to pick up vocabulary and pronunciation quickly. He also realised that despite his efforts, those young refugees needed to get out and mingle more frequently.

“By teaching them Korean, we are preparing them to get decent jobs and to be able to interact with the locals. We also run a healing camp, provide tour of the island and also have football camp. At night, we make them write letters to their families.”

But Jung-hoon admits the private organisations could only do so much and it is the government that needs to get more involved.

“It’s the fake news that’s the root of the problem. The government, superficially, says it will fight against this. But no action has been taken so far. Nothing is stopping this fake news from spreading and causing more problems.

“But at least, living on Jeju, you realise most of the people here are not that bad.”

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Sen. John McCain: What to know about Washington tributes on Saturday

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USA TODAY

Published 12:00 a.m. ET Sept. 1, 2018

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The family of Sen. John McCain said their goodbyes to the late Senator inside the Capitol Rotunda, following Congressional leaders and Vice President Mike Pence paying their respects with official wreaths laid in front of McCain’s casket. (Aug. 31)
AP

Sen. John McCain will be honored at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., Saturday in a memorial that will include speeches from two former presidents. 

The Saturday gathering comes after thousands of people paid respects to McCain on Friday at the U.S. Capitol Rotunda as the Arizona senator lay in state. 

The day was filled with tributes by the nation’s leaders, including Vice President Mike Pence. But there were also moments where regular people honored McCain by leaving messages at his Senate office or gathering to talk about politics and make new friends.

One of the more touching moments from Friday came as McCain’s 106-year-old mother took her turn to say goodbye

Sitting in a wheelchair, Roberta McCain pushed up to her son’s flag-draped coffin, where she made the sign of the cross before being wheeled away.

She plans to attend her son’s funeral service at the National Cathedral on Saturday when a planned motorcade will carry the senator’s body from the U.S. Capitol beginning at 8:30 a.m. 

MoreVisitors to McCain’s office documented his legacy in the Donald Trump era

On the way, the procession will pause at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, where Cindy McCain will lay a ceremonial wreath honoring those who died during the Vietnam War. The public is welcome to line the procession route along Constitution Avenue to pay respects to the senator. 

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An invitation-only national memorial service celebrating the senator’s life will begin at 10 a.m. EDT at Washington National Cathedral.

USA TODAY is providing extended coverage of McCain’s memorial events, including Saturday’s service at the National Cathedral. 

MoreMcCain the first Vietnam veteran to lie in state at Capitol Rotunda

Former Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, former Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger will give tributes.

McCain’s daughter Meghan will give a tribute, and daughter Sidney will give a reading. McCain’s son Jimmy will read the poem “The Requiem.”

McCain’s close friend, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., will read from the gospels. 

Bush was McCain’s rival in the 2000 presidential race. The senator withdrew after losing a series of primaries to Bush on Super Tuesday. McCain later supported his former adversary.

As the GOP nominee in 2008, McCain lost to Obama. In McCain’s concession speech at the Arizona Biltmore, he graciously spoke of the significance of Obama’s win, as the first African-American to hold the presidency.

On Sunday, McCain will be buried in the cemetery at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Services will be private.  

Contributing: Erin Kelly, Richard Wolf, Anne Ryman 

 

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Burning Man won’t fence off fires but will add volunteer security

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A man died Sunday morning after he ran into the flames of a giant effigy being burned at Burning Man on Saturday night as the weeklong festival drew to a close.
Trevor Hughes/USA Today

BLACK ROCK CITY, Nevada – A year after a man killed himself by running past safety wardens and into a fire at Burning Man, organizers have beefed up the number of volunteers guarding the pyrotechnic events and “burns” giving the event its name.

Burning Man officials last year erected a temporary safety fence around their final burn of the event, 24 hours after Aaron Joel Mitchell, 41, ran into the burning Man effigy. They also ringed that final burn, of the Temple building, with hundreds of additional volunteer safety wardens.

This year, no fences will surround either the Man or the Temple burns, which instead will be ringed by a heavy cadre of volunteers. All major burns are traditionally ringed by volunteer wardens, but this years’ burns are getting far more safety wardens.

Federal officials last year initially wanted to cancel the final burn following Mitchell’s death, but Burning Man organizers persuaded them to let it proceed using the temporary fences and extra safety wardens. 

Friday night, tens of thousands of attendees watched as two wooden trains collided amidst a series of explosions. No fence separated spectators from the explosions, although at least two concentric circles of wardens waited to intercept anyone who tried to get close.

First-time Burning Man attendees are often surprised by the lack of direct oversight for participants, who find themselves climbing dozens of feet into the air on scaffolding, operating propane-powered flamethrowers and participating in gladiator-style combat.

Earlier this week, an attendee fell from an art installation of seven junked cars and a trailer spiked onto the desert with a tower about 50 feet fall, topped with flamethrowers. The structure, called “Night at the Climb In,” was cordoned off afterward. The condition of the person who fell was not released.

More: Burning Man asked to shut down entry after overselling event

Federal officials declined to comment on any specific safety changes they required of Burning Man following last year’s death.

“Public health and safety is the BLM’s top priority during the Burning Man event and the agency will not release details from the security plan that could negatively impact their effectiveness,” BLM spokesman Kyle Hendrix said earlier this summer. “Sensitive information from the security plan could be abused if released and has the potential to create additional public health and safety concerns.”

The elaborate Man structure is set to burn Saturday night after dark, with the Temple burn set for Sunday evening. A series of smaller burns of wooden artwork are also planned through the weekend. Firefighters are on hand for the event’s duration.

More: Tensions rise between Burning Man and law enforcement, again

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Wales 0-3 England: Phil Neville hails ‘great night for women’s football’

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Highlights: Wales Women 0-3 England Women

England manager Phil Neville hailed a “great night for women’s football” after his side beat Wales to reach next year’s World Cup in France.

Victory for either side would have put them through, but second-half goals from Toni Duggan, Jill Scott and Nikita Parris proved to be the difference.

“We will celebrate and enjoy the next couple of days,” Neville told BBC Two.

“When I took the job, I said I wanted to win the World Cup. This week has felt like the biggest game so far.”

He added: “I am happy we are going to France, I am not totally happy with the way we played, we can play better but we have some good players.

“Our plan is now to play five or six of the top eight [in the world] and when we get to France we want to know where we are.”

‘We showed our class’

Teams who have qualified for the World Cup so far

England went into the game in second place in the qualification group behind Wales, who had not conceded in any of their previous seven qualifying games.

But Neville’s side, who are fourth in the Fifa world rankings, showed their superiority in the second period against a team ranked 25 spots below.

And they did it with a game to spare, coming up against Kazakhstan in their final qualifier on Tuesday.

Neville said: “Job done. I went straight to the Wales players at the end – they’ve been fantastic in the campaign.

“I thought we showed our class in the second half and showed we are a top, top team. I’m proud and I’m looking forward to the next 12 months.

“For 30 minutes we controlled the game but then we started to listen to the crowd and they started to win tackles and we switched off at free-kicks.

“I told the players to relax at half-time and enjoy possession. That was part of our training. We sustained our attacks and they lost their energy and our quality showed in the end. We’ll enjoy tonight and we’re on our way to France.”

Midfielder Scott added: “Wales played really well, they made us bring out another side to our game, we had to be strong in the tackle, angry and now we know we can fight and we will need that at the World Cup.”

‘The gulf wasn’t there at times’

Duggan fires England into lead against Wales

Under Mark Sampson, England finished third at the last World Cup in Canada, losing to Japan in the semi-finals but beating Germany in the third-fourth place play-off match.

Asked if he thought England could go one step further next year in France, Neville replied: “I believe [we can go a step further] but I don’t think the players believe at this moment in time.

“I still think they have a little bit to go, but each time we meet up I see more development and more improvement.

“Wales took us all the way to the wire and they should be unbelievably proud. It’s been a great night for women’s football.”

Meanwhile, Wales will wait to find out the outcome of the remaining fixtures to see if they are able to grab a play-off spot as one of the best four runners-up.

Manager Jayne Ludlow said: “This campaign has been fantastic but tonight we’ve not been good enough. These girls are capable of playing at the highest level but they need to show that.

“There’s a reason why England qualify for every major campaign – they are quality. We can correct the errors.

“We’re 29th, they’re fourth. That gulf wasn’t there at times tonight.”

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UNRWA: US funding cut ‘deeply regrettable and shocking’

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The UN Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) calls the decision by the Trump administration to no longer commit funding “deeply regrettable” and “shocking”.

UNRWA Spokesperson Chris Gunness said on Saturday that the move would affect “millions of people” including “some of the most disadvantaged and marginalised on this planet”.

For nearly 70 years, UNRWA has provided lifesaving assistance to more than five million Palestinian refugees in the occupied territories, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan.

Set up in 1949 to serve the needs of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who were driven from their homes after the creation of Israel, the organisation has been providing refugees with access to food, education, healthcare, social services and employment.

But over the past year, the US government has made it increasingly clear it considers the work the organisation does, and who it considers as refugees, to be an obstacle in the protracted Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

In January, a month after President Donald Trump’s decided to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, a move that prompted widespread international condemnation, the White House decided to cut $65m in aid to UNRWA.

It was later reported that the Trump administration had withheld about $305m in funding, and only delivered $60m to UNRWA.

UNRWA told Al Jazeera it spent the next eight months scrambling for financial assistance, and was only able to continue operating after large contributions were raised by Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, which donated $150m between them.

But on Friday, the US announced it would stop all funding calling the UN agency an “irredeemably flawed operation”.

The decision was quickly criticised by the Palestinian leadership, and a spokesperson for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pushed back against claims that the agency was inefficient.

“UNRWA has a strong record of providing high-quality education, health and other essential services, often in extremely difficult circumstances,” a statement by Stephane Dujarric read.

“The Secretary-General calls on other countries to help fill the remaining financial gap, so that UNRWA can continue to provide this vital assistance, as well as a sense of hope this vulnerable population.”

What is UNRWA?

Originally established as a temporary solution, UNRWA was set up after the creation of Israel in 1948 to assist the more than 700,000 Palestinians who were forcibly expelled from their towns and villages.

Since then, it has helped four generations of Palestinians with basic needs, including housing, healthcare, education and social services.

Employing more than 30,000 staff, it mostly works in education, and operates closely with local government bodies.

It helps more than half of Gaza’s two million population, a region which has been devastated by more than 10 years of blockade.

According to UNRWA, the strip suffers from a 44 percent unemployment rate.

Gunness, the agency’s spokesman, told Al Jazeera that if UNRWA didn’t receive emergency funding in the next 30 days, when its funds are expected to run dry, a “doomsday scenario” could unfold.

“Let there be no mistake; this decision is likely to have a devastating impact on the lives of 526,000 children who receive a daily education from UNRWA, 3.5 million sick people who come to our clinics for medical care, 1.7 million food insecure people who receive assistance from us, and tens of thousands of vulnerable women, children and disabled refugees who come to us.

“If we don’t fill a funding gap of $217m very quickly, they are all likely to suffer”.

I was born in a tent in a refugee camp. I was raised in camp. Without the help of UNRWA I would not have had clothes, food or schooling.

Mohammad Oweis, Palestinian refugee

What programmes does it offer?

According to UNRWA, the US provided $364m to the agency last year and the money it contributed, along with the $650m donated by other UN member states, provided essential relief to more than five million Palestinian refugees.

The funds helped provide for basic commodities such as flour, rice, sugar, powdered milk, canned meats, pharmaceuticals and drugs, and general supplies such as school textbooks and equipment.

Mohammad Oweis, a Washington DC-based political analyst and researcher,  who specialises in the Middle East, said the agency helped people such as himself go on to live a better life.

“I was born in a tent in a refugee camp. I was raised in camp. Without the help of UNRWA, I would not have had clothes, food or schooling,” he said.

Why is funding being cut?

Key to the Trump administration and Israel’s criticism of UNRWA is the way the agency counts the refugees, including in the total tally the decendants of refugees who were orignially displaced by the creation of Israel. 

Israel fears that the passing of refugee status from parents to children could threaten the country’s so-called “Jewish character”, as Palestinians claim the right of return to their ancestral homeland.

Earlier this year, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for UNRWA to be scrapped, and accused the agency of helping “fictitious refugees”.

“UNRWA is an organisation that perpetuates the Palestinian refugee problem and the narrative of the right-of-return, as it were, in order to eliminate the State of Israel,” Netanyahu said.

WATCH: UNRWA concerned about Palestinian refugees in Syria’s Yarmouk (2:38)

His comments were echoed by Nikki Haley, the US Ambassador to the UN, earlier this week who accused the agency of exaggerating the number of Palestinian refugees it currently provides aid to, as the US is reportedly planning to cap the number it officially recognises as refugees at only 500,000.

“We will be a donor if it [UNRWA] reforms what it does … if they actually change the number of refugees to an accurate account, we will look back at partnering them,” Haley said.

By undermining UNRWA’s definition of refugees, the administration appears to be attacking the Palestinian belief in the “right of return” – that one day the refugees will be able to go back to their ancestral homes.

In emails leaked to Foreign Policy magazine last month, Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner, described the agency as not conducive to “peace”.

And during his visit to Jordan last June, he reportedly pushed for the refugee status of the two million Palestinians registered in the country to be dissolved.

Gunness rejected the administrations’ claims, saying it marked a 180-degree turn from the praise UNRWA received by the US last year.

“Late last year the US President said our programmes had a great impact, they we were transparent and we had conducted root and branch efficient reforms – saving the agency tens of millions of dollars.

“But within months of receiving that high praise, we then get the decision to cut off aid. We need to ask the US administration if and why they are politicising aid”.

By cutting aid, the US is violating international law.

Saeb Erekat, Secretary-General of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO)

What will the cut mean for ordinary Palestinians?

With the UN struggling to grapple with a host of crises, including wars in Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the shortfall could have disastrous consequences for the five million Palestinian refugees.

According to Gunness, the $217m shortfall means that by the end of September “UNRWA will be running on empty and won’t have enough money to pay for for its 22,000 teaching staff”.

“After September we wont have enough money to run our schools, health clinics and our relief and social services programmes. That is the doomsday scenario.

“We are working tirelessly to avoid that.”

Is anyone stepping in?

UNRWA’s planned budget for 2018 was over one billion dollars. So far, Gulf States, Norway, Turkey and Canada have stepped in with pledges of $238m to help meet the budget deficit.

Gunness said it was “remarkable” the agency had managed to raise so much in the past eight months, adding it had a “long way to go,” as these pledges still needed to be paid out.

“We have been very generously supported by over 20 major donors and were looking for money from all of them and also from new donors,” he said.

On Friday, the Jordanian foreign minister, Ayman Safadi, said his country would host a fund-raising at the UN headquarters in September with the aim to “close the gap and put in place a plan that will ensure UNRWA’s continued, ongoing funding for the coming years”.

Meanwhile, the German foreign minister, Heiko Maas, said his government had pledged to significantly increase its future contributions, from roughly $94 million this year to an unspecified larger amount.

The Reuters news agency quoted him as saying that “the loss of [UNRWA] could unleash an uncontrollable chain reaction”.

How have the Palestinian Authority and Hamas responded?

Senior members of Palestinian Authority denounced the decision and said it violated international law.

Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah tweeted: “We reject the US administration’s decision to stop its funding of UNRWA in its latest blatant aggression against the rights of the Palestinian people, international law and UN General Assembly resolution 302 of 1949, which specified that the UN agency was established to provide its services in all areas until the refugee issue is resolved”.

Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister Ryad al-Maliki said: “We will challenge the Trump decision & UNRWA is here to stay as long as there is one Palestinian refugee left.”

Saeb Erekat, the Secretary-General of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation, said the pro-Israel bias of President Trump’s administration has disqualified it from any role in the peace process.

“By cutting aid, the US is violating international law. UNRWA is not a Palestinian agency but was established by the United Nations, and there is an international obligation to assist and support it until all the problems of the Palestinian refugees are solved.”

Meanwhile, senior Hamas senior official Sami Abu Zuhri tweeted: “The US decision to cancel aid to UNRWA aims to remove the right of return and represents a serious American escalation against the Palestinian people. The decision reflects the Zionist background of the American leadership that has become an enemy of our people and our Muslim nation as a whole.

“We insist that we will not succumb to such unjust decisions”.

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