Palestinian leaders on Friday vowed to defy a new Israeli military order which they fear could lead to the confiscation of money destined for prisoners and their relatives.
Israel has long sought to end the payments, made by the Palestinian Authority to around 11,000 individuals and families. The Palestinians consider them stipends for victims of Israeli occupation, but Israel calls the payments a reward for terror.
With a new Israeli military order set to take effect on Saturday threatening fines and jail for anyone who facilitates such payments, Palestinian banks began shutting down the accounts of some prisoners and their families in recent days.
The prisoners and families are seen as heroes by many Palestinians, and the decision by banks to shut their accounts drew a backlash. Two branches of one bank, Cairo Amman Bank, were attacked overnight; one torched and another fired on by gunmen.
Stepping into the fray on Friday night, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said banks had agreed to reopen the accounts.
“Families of prisoners can activate their bank accounts starting from Sunday,” he said in a statement. “We reject the Israeli threats to banks over the allocations of prisoners and martyrs, and we will not submit to them.”
Israel’s military said in a statement that the order expands its authority to seize assets received from committing a security offense. It did not comment on whether banks specifically would face penalties.
The Association of Banks in Palestine defended the account closures as intended to protect prisoners’ assets from seizure and defend the banks and their employees from Israeli punishment. The group called on the PA to find another method to make the payments. Read more at Algemeiner