Skip to main content

US removes UNRWA's legal immunity amid Israeli lawsuit

US removes UNRWA's legal immunity amid Israeli lawsuit
MENA
3 min read
The US government's decision to strip UNRWA of immunity allows an Israeli lawsuit alleging the agency played a role in the 7 October attack to proceed.
Lawyers for UNRWA have called the lawsuit 'absurd'. [Getty]

The Trump administration has decided that the UN agency for Palestinian refugees is not immune from being sued, reversing the US government's longstanding position that the organization was protected from civil liability.

The Justice Department revealed its new stance in a letter it filed in federal court in New York on Thursday as part of an Israeli lawsuit that claims the agency, known as UNRWA, participated in the 7 October, 2023, deadly attack on Israel by Hamas.

The change in position underscores the hardened perspective toward the agency under the Trump administration following allegations by Israel that some of the agency staff was involved in the attack.

The lawsuit, filed by families of some of the victims of the attack, alleges that UNRWA had aided Hamas by, among other things, permitting weapons storage and deployment centers in its schools and medical clinics and by employing Hamas members.

Israel has long alleged that UNRWA has aided Hamas, using that as a justification for deadly attacks on the organisation's facilities and staff.

It has provided no evidence for this however.

Lawyers for UNRWA have called the lawsuit “absurd” and have said in court filings that the agency was immune from liability as a “subsidiary organ” of the United Nations.

In a statement Friday, UNRWA spokesperson Juliette Touma said the Justice Department filing reversed the US government's "longstanding recognition that UNRWA is a subsidiary body of the General Assembly and an integral part of the United Nations, entitled to immunity from legal process." She said the agency would continue to make its case before the court and "will consider whether any other action is appropriate with respect to the letter."

The Justice Department acknowledged in its 10-page letter that though its position had been that UNRWA was shielded from litigation, "the Government has since reevaluated that position, and now concludes UNRWA is not immune from this litigation."

"The complaint in this case alleges atrocious conduct on the part of UNRWA and its officers. Of course, such allegations are only the first step on a long road, where plaintiffs will be required to prove what they have alleged. But UNRWA is not above that process — nor are the bulk of the remaining defendants," the letter states. "The Government believes they must answer these allegations in American courts. The prior Administration’s view that they do not was wrong."

The letter was signed by Jay Clayton, the new US attorney in Manhattan, and another lawyer in the office, as well as Yaakov Roth, the acting assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department's civil division.

UNRWA was established by the UN General Assembly in 1949 to provide relief for Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes before and during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, which followed the establishment of Israel, as well as their descendants, until there is a political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The agency provides aid and services - including health and education - to some 2.5 million Palestinian refugees in Gaza and the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem, as well as 3 million more in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon. Since the Israel-Hamas war, it has been the main lifeline for a population reliant on humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Israel alleged that 19 out of UNRWA’s approximately 13,000 staff in Gaza took part in Hamas’ attack in southern Israel, which killed about 1,200 people and set off the war in Gaza.

UNRWA said it fired nine staffers after an internal UN investigation concluded that they could have been involved, although the evidence was not authenticated or corroborated.

Israel later alleged that about 100 other Palestinians in Gaza were Hamas members, but never provided any evidence to the United Nations.

(The Associated Press)