US urges Israel to extend banking relations with Palestinian banks for at least a year

Adewale Adeyemo listens to questions during his Senate Finance Committee nomination hearing to be the next Deputy Treasury Secretary on February 23, 2021 at Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 24 September 2024
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US urges Israel to extend banking relations with Palestinian banks for at least a year

  • Israel’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip has killed more than 41,000 Palestinians, according to health officials in the Hamas-ruled enclave, and created a humanitarian crisis

WASHINGTON: US Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo urged Israel to extend its banking relationships with Palestinian banks for at least a year to avert an economic crisis in the West Bank, warning that Israel’s own security was at stake.
Adeyemo delivered the message in a meeting with Bank of Israel Governor Amir Yaron in New York on Monday on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly before meeting separately with Jordan’s King Abdullah.
“He expressed the United States government’s concern about threats by some within the Israeli government to sever correspondent banking relationships between Israeli and Palestinian banks and insisted that these should be extended for at least a year,” the Treasury Department said in a statement about Adeyemo’s meeting with Yaron.
Israel’s UN mission declined to comment.
US officials have been warning for months that threats by Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and other Israeli officials to cut off Palestinian banks from their Israeli correspondent banks could destabilize the Palestinian Authority, which in turn could harm Israel’s own security.
The banking correspondence authorization is due to expire on Oct. 31, posing risks to export and import transactions valued at nearly $10 billion, Treasury officials have said.
Adeyemo told Abdullah that any Israeli move to cut off Palestinian banks would raise the risk of regional instability and could move more Palestinian financial transactions into the shadows, both of which would harm Israeli and regional security, said a source familiar with those talks.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raised similar concerns ahead of a Group of Seven finance ministers meeting in May, and the issue was mentioned in two G7 joint communiques.
“The viability of the Palestinian Authority is essential to stability in the West Bank, which in turn is essential to Israel’s own national security,” said one US official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The World Bank on Monday said the Palestinian territories were already “nearing economic freefall,” with Gaza’s gross domestic product declining 86 percent in the first quarter of 2024 year on year, and the Palestinian Authority facing a financing gap of $1.86 billion in 2024 and heightened risks of a “systemic failure.”
Smotrich in June extended a waiver that allows cooperation between Israel’s banking system and Palestinian banks in the occupied West Bank, but only for four months, not a full year as his predecessors had done.
The waiver allows Israeli banks to process shekel payments for services and salaries tied to the Palestinian Authority, without the risk of being charged with money laundering and funding terrorism. Without it, Palestinian banks would be cut off from the Israeli financial system.
US officials have been tight-lipped about what would happen if Israel failed to extend the waiver, and whether they could impose sanctions similar to those slapped on Israeli settlers for violence against Palestinians in the West Bank.

 


N Korean leader’s daughter fuels succession speculation with mausoleum visit

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N Korean leader’s daughter fuels succession speculation with mausoleum visit

SEOUL: The North Korean leader’s daughter Kim Ju Ae has made her first public visit to a mausoleum housing her grandfather and great-grandfather, state media images showed Friday, further solidifying her place as likely next in line to run the nuclear-armed dictatorship.
The Kim family has ruled North Korea with an iron grip for decades, and a cult of personality surrounding their so-called “Paektu bloodline” dominates daily life in the isolated country.
Current leader Kim Jong Un is the third in line to rule in the world’s only communist monarchy, following his father Kim Jong Il and grandfather Kim Il Sung.
The two men — dubbed “eternal leaders” in state propaganda — are housed in the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, a vast mausoleum in downtown Pyongyang.
The state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported that Kim Jong Un had visited the palace, accompanied by top officials. Images released by the agency showed daughter Ju Ae alongside him.
South Korea’s spy agency said last year she was now understood to be the next in line to rule North Korea after she accompanied her father on a high-profile visit to Beijing.

- ‘Presented as Kim’s successor’ -

And Cheong Seong-chang at Seoul’s Sejong Institute said he expected her to soon be “formally confirmed as the next successor both domestically and internationally.”
Cheong, author of a book on the Kim leadership, said her placement in the center of the front row during her visit to the place — a place typically reserved for her father — was especially notable.
It could be “interpreted as reporting to the ‘eternal leaders’ Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il that she is being presented as his successor,” he said.
Ju Ae was publicly introduced to the world in 2022 when she accompanied her father to an intercontinental ballistic missile launch.
North Korean state media have since referred to her as “the beloved child,” and a “great person of guidance” — “hyangdo” in Korean — a term typically reserved for top leaders and their successors.
Before 2022, the only confirmation of her existence had come from former NBA star Dennis Rodman, who made a visit to the North in 2013.
Analysts have suggested that she could be elected First Secretary of the Central Committee, the second most powerful position in the North Korean ruling party, at a landmark congress due to be held in the coming weeks.
On Thursday, footage showed Ju Ae accompanying her parents at New Year celebrations in Pyongyang.
While first lady Ri Sol Ju kept a low profile, state TV showed Ju Ae placing one hand on the North Korean leader’s face and kissing him on the cheek — a rare public display of affection which drew headlines in South Korea.