JERUSALEM, June 9 (Xinhua) -- The Palestinian government led by the Islamic
Resistance Movement (Hamas) has sent a letter to Israel demanding for returning
the tax and customs revenues that withheld by Israel, the Jerusalem Post
newspaper reported Friday.
According to the report, the one-page letter was written in English and
formally addressed to Israeli Finance Minister Avraham Hirchson at his office in
Jerusalem.
The letter said that the Palestinian side needs the money to meet the
payroll for its approximately 160,000 civil servants, whom it has generally been
unable to pay since the international community froze funding after Hamas came
to power.
It also accused Israel of unlawful behavior and specified the agreements
under which, it asserted, Israel was obligated to transfer the funds, including
the Paris protocol on economic relations of April 1994, which formed part of the
Oslo accords.
Israeli Finance Ministry, however, has no intention to respond to the
letter, said the report.
The Israeli government, which considers Hamas a terrorist group, has
stopped transferring the revenues to the Palestinian side since Hamas won the
January Palestinian legislative elections.
After Hamas came to power, it had vowed to keep its police to commit itself
to Israel's destruction and refused to renounce violence and honor previous
Palestinian-Israeli agreements.
Due to the West cutoff of crucial aid and Israel's withholding of tax
money, the Hamas-led government has been facing a deepening financial crisis.
Enditem