UN considers response to Israeli move to build military compound on site of relief agency

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Damascus, May 19 (AP) The United Nations is considering how to respond to Israel's announcement that it will build a military complex on the former headquarters of the UN relief agency for Palestinians in east Jerusalem, an official said Tuesday.
     Israel at the weekend announced the government's approval for a defence ministry complex at the United Nations Relief and Works Agency's compound in Sheikh Jarrah, including a museum and enlistment office.
    “The matter is currently under consideration at the level of the legal council, the highest legal authority of the United Nations in New York,” UNRWA Deputy Commissioner General Natalie Boucly told The Associated Press during a visit to Syria.
    “These are UN premises and, at a minimum, this is a breach of the 1946 UN Convention on privileges and immunities,” she said.
     Israel bulldozed part of the UNRWA compound in January, capping off a decades-long campaign against the agency, which became acute following the Hamas-led attacks on October 7, 2023.
     Israel has accused the UN agency of harbouring staff members affiliated with Hamas, accusing some of taking part in the attacks.
     UNRWA leaders have said they took swift action against the employees accused of taking part in the 2023 attacks, and have denied allegations that the agency tolerates or collaborates with Hamas.
     Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz said the plan to build a defence complex on the former UNRWA headquarters was “a decision of sovereignty, Zionism and security.”
     “In a place where an organisation that became part of the terror and incitement mechanism against Israel operated, institutions will be established that will strengthen Jerusalem, the (Israeli army), and the State of Israel,” Katz said in a statement on Sunday.
     The decision came on Jerusalem Day, which marks Israel's capture of east Jerusalem, including the Old City and its holy sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, in the 1967 Mideast war.
     Israel considers the entire city of Jerusalem its capital, while the Palestinians seek east Jerusalem as the capital of their future independent state.
     The UNRWA compound was shut down in May 2025 after far-right protesters, including at least one member of parliament, overran its gate in view of the police.
    UNRWA's mandate is to provide aid and services to some 2.5 million Palestinian refugees in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem, as well as 3 million refugees in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon.
     Its operations were curtailed last year when Israel's Knesset passed legislation severing ties and banning it from functioning in what it defines as Israel — including east Jerusalem.
     Boucly said the humanitarian situation in Gaza “remains absolutely dire.” While UNRWA international staff have been barred by Israel from entering Gaza, about 10,000 local staff continue to work in the enclave, including teachers, health workers and sanitation workers, she said.
     Despite a tenuous ceasefire, “there are issues with insufficient aid coming in,” she said. “It is not coming in at scale and reconstruction is not starting fast enough for the people to see a real change on the ground.”
     Boucly spoke to the AP from Syria's Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp, where the situation is somewhat more hopeful as former residents who fled during the country's 14-year civil war have been gradually returning.
     Taken over by a series of militant groups then bombarded by the military of then President Bashar Assad, the camp was all but abandoned after 2018. The buildings that were not destroyed by bombs were demolished by the government or stripped by thieves.
     After Assad's ouster in 2024, former residents began to trickle back and repair their damaged homes. As of April, some 60,000 people had returned to the camp, of which 80 per cent are Palestinian refugees, Boucly said.
     Assistance to those returning to the camp has been limited, she acknowledged. UNRWA has received donor aid to rehabilitate schools and health centres, but has been unable to provide more than minor assistance to people needing to repair their damaged homes, she said.
     Despite anxieties about shrinking funding, she said, “I think there is a situation of hope for Palestine refugees” in Syria. (AP)
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(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)