French President Jacques Chirac (L) talks with
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas April 28 upon his arrival at the Elysee Palace
in Paris. -Xinhua/Reuters
French President Jacques Chirac told Palestine's visiting leader Mahmoud
Abbas on Friday that he would propose to set up a special account run by the
World Bank to pay the 160,000 Palestinian civil servants their salaries, his
office said.
Chirac had talks with Abbas, whose visit to France was the last leg of a
one-week tour that took him to Finland, Norway and Turkey, the purpose of which
was to lobby for the resumption of western aid to the Palestinians.
Chirac would make his proposal at the meeting of the International Quartet
(United Nations, European Union, United States and Russia) on May 9, said
Chirac's spokesman Jerome Bonnafont, who noted that one of the main topics would
be the aid issue.
Chirac said "France would propose to its European and international
partners... that they reflect very rapidly on a mechanism to allow the
resumption of aid," according to the spokesman.
As to the sensitive issue of the 160,000 Palestinian public servants'
payments, Chirac said "We could study the urgent creation of an escrow account
managed for example by the World Bank which could take in the aid funds intended
to pay the salaries," said Bonnafont, adding that "direct aid to the service of
the presidency of the Palestinian Authority would be increased".
"Concerning the problem of aid to the Palestinians, [specifically]
humanitarian and technical aid -- France believes that this aid should be
maintained for human and political reasons, and it will argue for its
maintenance in the international community and notably in the European Union,"
Chirac said in a brief statement to the press before his talks with Abbas.
The European Union, with its 650-million-dollar donation is the main
contributor to the international aid pool, totaling 1.3 billion dollars, with
the United States contributing 300 million dollars, Japan (100 million dollars),
and the rest being financed by Arabic countries (250 million dollars).
France, besides its contribution through the EU, also provides additional aid
of 25 million euros (32.5 million dollars).