This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Document 52012SC0120
JOINT STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in the occupied Palestinian territory Progress in 2011 and recommendations for action Accompanying the document JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Delivering on a new European Neighbourhood Policy
JOINT STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in the occupied Palestinian territory Progress in 2011 and recommendations for action Accompanying the document JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Delivering on a new European Neighbourhood Policy
JOINT STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in the occupied Palestinian territory Progress in 2011 and recommendations for action Accompanying the document JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Delivering on a new European Neighbourhood Policy
/* SWD/2012/0120 final */
JOINT STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in the occupied Palestinian territory Progress in 2011 and recommendations for action Accompanying the document JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Delivering on a new European Neighbourhood Policy /* SWD/2012/0120 final */
1.
Overall assessment and recommendations
This document reports on overall progress
made on the implementation of the EU-Palestinian Authority ENP Action Plan
between 1 January and 31 December 2011, although developments outside this
period are also considered when deemed relevant. It is not a general
overview of the political and economic situation in the occupied Palestinian
territory. For information on regional and multilateral sector processes
readers should also refer to the report on the Partnership for Democracy and
Shared Prosperity progress report. A new Action Plan, currently being negotiated
by the parties, should be agreed in 2012. Overall, the Palestinian Authority (PA) has
made good progress in implementing the Action Plan in the areas within its
control. However, the occupation and the internal Palestinian division have continued
to have a serious impact on the PA’s ability to serve the public effectively
and to pursue economic development. In the West Bank, the PA’s capacity to
impose the rule of law has become more effective, with steady progress registered
in justice sector reform. However, the human rights situation remains a matter of
concern, particularly in the Gaza Strip, but also in the West Bank. Human
rights violations by individuals in the security services need to be seriously
addressed. There has been no progress towards re-establishing a participatory
democratic process, despite the capacity which the PA has demonstrated in the
past to hold elections in line with international standards. Moreover, despite
the much-heralded reconciliation agreement signed between Fatah and Hamas in
May 2011 which should have led to new elections, the agreement has not yet been
implemented. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Fayyad, the government
continues to rule in a caretaker capacity in the West Bank, while a de-facto
authority continues to rule in the Gaza Strip. Despite these challenges, the PA has continued
to register notable achievements in its state-building agenda. Its readiness for
statehood was underlined both at the spring meeting of the Ad Hoc Liaison
Committee (AHLC) hosted by the High Representative in Brussels and at the
subsequent meeting held in September in New York. This progress risks being
jeopardised as a result of the widening gap between the progress witnessed in
the PA’s state-building efforts and the lack of progress on the political track,
namely continued deadlock in the peace process throughout 2011 and the
continuing internal Palestinian division. On 23 September 2011, President Abbas
submitted, on behalf of the Palestinian people, an application of the state of Palestine for admission to membership in the United
Nations. The economy of the occupied Palestinian
territory (oPt) grew by 9.5% in the first half of 2011 although there was a
sharp contrast between the Gaza Strip which registered a growth of about 20%,
as it began to recover as a result of the slight loosening of the Israeli
blockade in 2010, and the West Bank, which slowed to 5.7%. Total unemployment fell
and inflation remained moderate and relatively stable. The economy is
threatened by the PA’s mounting fiscal crisis following a major shortfall in
donor disbursements and insufficient easing of Israeli restrictions. This has
also impeded progress towards the Action Plan goal of strengthening the PA’s
administrative capacity in the area of economic reform. In the area of public finance management,
the new law on public procurement was adopted. The creation of a macro-fiscal
unit has boosted the Ministry of Finance’s fiscal reporting and forecasting
capacities. However, the PA’s efforts to contain total expenditures could not offset
the effect of lower than expected revenues. The EU continued to be the PA’s most
reliable and important partner, contributing essentially to the stabilisation
of the precarious fiscal situation and, ultimately, to the stabilisation of the
social situation in both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. In 2011, the EU
also granted duty-free and quota-free access to the EU market for Palestinian
agricultural products, processed agricultural products, fish and fishery
products. In the social sectors, the PA’s
poverty-based cash transfer programme was fully rolled out in the Gaza Strip
with the support of EU technical assistance. The PA maintained its high
commitment to the education sector and progress was registered in the health
sector. Nevertheless, both sectors face serious challenges in the Gaza Strip
mainly as a result of the ongoing closure. The PA progressed well in the energy
sector, adopting a strategy and implementing electricity sector reform. On the basis of this year’s report and with
a view to sustained implementation of the ENP Action Plan in 2012, the
Palestinian Authority is invited to: ·
Pursue the implementation of the reconciliation
agreement signed on 3 May 2011 based on a commitment to the two-state solution. ·
Hold genuine, transparent local and national
elections in the oPt in line with international standards. ·
Reform and develop the Palestinian security
sector, institutionalising democratic control, promoting an environment
conducive to civilian oversight and accountability for individuals suspected of
abuses, and ensuring that all security sector agencies fully respect human
rights, in particular for all detainees. ·
Adopt a unified penal code which adheres to
international human rights standards, including the formal abolition of the
death penalty and strengthens legal guarantees for all fundamental freedoms. ·
Clarify the responsibilities of the three main
judicial institutions namely the Ministry of Justice, the Office of the
Attorney General and the High Judicial Council. ·
Adopt and implement the new regulatory framework
for public procurement, including the adoption and harmonization of the relevant
by-laws and procurement-related regulations. ·
Implement a Public Expenditure and Financial
Accountability (PEFA) assessment in 2012 and continue improving public finance
management, in particular by developing and upgrading the State Audit and
Administrative Control Bureau (SAACB) as an independent external audit
institution in line with the International Organisation of Supreme Audit
Institutions standards. ·
Develop costing models and ensure appropriate
allocation of the national budget to cover the cost of providing a set of basic
social protection interventions, including the development and implementation
of contributory schemes. ·
Sign and ratify the regional Convention on pan-Euro-Mediterranean
Rules of Origin. ·
Implement the energy strategy including further
progress on electricity sector reform particularly through further reductions in
net lending. Governance,
including reform of the security and justice systems, is a focal sector of EU
co-operation with the Palestinian Authority. There are a number of projects underway
and in the pipeline which are intended to assist the PA in making progress
towards accomplishing the recommendations.
2.
Political dialogue and reform
Towards deep and sustainable
democracy
More than four years of emergency rule and
the continuing split between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip continue to take
their toll on democratic institutions. The EU has continued to support the
operational capacity of the Central Elections Commission (CEC) and the
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC). Nonetheless the holding of presidential,
legislative and local elections across the entire occupied Palestinian
territory (oPt) remains a priority precondition for the reinvigoration of
democratic legitimacy, institutional sustainability and the reinforcement of
good governance. In October 2011, the parliamentary assembly of the Council of
Europe awarded the Palestinian National Council, the parliamentary body of the
PLO, the status of ‘Partner for Democracy’. The implementation of the Fatah-Hamas reconciliation
agreement, signed on 3 May in Cairo, stalled. Several months later there was
still no new government of independent technocrats, which was supposed to be
the first step in the deal's implementation. The agreement also
included a commitment to hold elections within one year. Although President
Abbas announced in early December 2011 that elections were scheduled for 4 May
2012, no Presidential Decree to this effect has been issued. Following its
resignation on 14 February 2011, the 13th government under Prime
Minister Fayyad thus continued to rule the Palestinian Authority in a
care-taker capacity. A de facto government continued to rule in the Gaza
Strip. The PLC continued not to meet and laws were issued by Presidential
Decree under emergency rule. Democratic oversight over the PA was maintained, but
only to a limited extent, through civil society organisations and informal
sessions held by remaining PLC members in Ramallah. While there is a thriving civil society, freedom
of association remains under tight control in the West Bank and is under permanent
threat in the Gaza Strip, where a number of civil society organisations and
associations have been shut down. Palestinian freedom of association is also
curtailed in East Jerusalem, where five Palestinian organizations have been
closed down by the Israeli authorities. Freedom of assembly is guaranteed by the Palestinian Basic Law but has been violated a number
of times in the West Bank. On various occasions since the crackdown on the
March 14 youth movement that rallied support for Palestinian unity, permission
to hold a number of demonstrations, marches and events has not been granted. In
the Gaza Strip, the de-facto authorities prevented peaceful marches to
commemorate the annual anniversary of the death of former President Arafat.
These rights have also been curtailed by the Israeli authorities, especially in
villages organising peaceful protests against the Separation Barrier. Violations of the rights of Palestinian
journalists, both by Israeli forces and by the Palestinian security forces in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip, persisted on a wide scale with journalists being
severely harassed and at times arbitrarily detained. The Palestinian Centre
for Development and Media Freedoms deplored the numerous violations of the freedom
of expression and the media in the oPt, including the banning of some
newspapers from working in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip. Improvements continued to be observed on
the independence of the judiciary and combating impunity with the
population showing more confidence in the justice system and increased access
to higher quality services in the West Bank. The EU continued to support the
reform process through education and training for judges, prosecutors and
lawyers. Preparations have started for the construction of seven new
courthouses across the West Bank, where institutional capacity and the skills
of judges, court staff and lawyers are improving. The PA has taken significant
measures to improve efficiency in the judicial process, for instance in the
areas of case management and inter-institutional collaboration in criminal
justice. Despite these positive developments,
further improvements are required to maintain the pace of reform so as to
ensure fair trials, especially with regard to the quality of judgments, the
independence of judges, the implementation of court decisions and putting a
stop to civilians’ trials by the military judiciary. The Ministry of Justice
(MoJ), the High Judicial Council and the Office of the Attorney General have
worked together on improving their units and departments, including the
reinforcement of the human rights unit at the MoJ. However, a draft memorandum
of understanding to clarify the division of responsibilities between these
institutions has not yet been approved. A draft new penal code is awaiting
approval. The PA should also make greater efforts to ensure that the human
rights enshrined in the Basic Law and other legislation are respected by all state
institutions responsible for applying the rule of law. The PA continued to make progress in the fight
against corruption. An Anti-corruption Commission was created, co-operation
between the Ministry of Finance’s Internal Audit Department and the PA’s audit
committee improved and the PA’s supreme audit, the State Audit and
Administrative Control Bureau (SAACB), was strengthened with EU support. Security and law enforcement sector
reform remained unsatisfactory, with no major
progress in terms of civilian or democratic control over security forces
or in terms of the integration of the various security services under the
Ministry of Interior. Little progress was made on a number of initiatives
suggested by the EU and the international community aimed at bolstering
accountability. Although there are indications that citizens are generally
positive about police activities in the areas where the Palestinian Civil
Police is active, they are less positive about the other security services such
as Preventive Security and General Intelligence, over which the Ministry of
Interior has less control. The Israeli occupation continued to have a serious
impact both on the functioning of the security sector and on its ability to
serve the public effectively.
Other human rights and
governance-related issues
In 2011, recurrent cycles of hostilities in
the Gaza Strip continued to put civilians at risk; in an escalation between 8
and 11 December, civilians accounted for over 90 percent of casualties in the
Gaza Strip. According the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA), in 2011 a total of 121 Palestinians have been killed in
Israeli-Palestinian conflict related incidents in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
West Bank
settler-related violence remains a matter of grave concern. OCHA registered 377 cases of settler violence in 2011. The weekly average of settler
attacks across the West Bank resulting in Palestinian casualties and property
damage increased by 40% in 2011 compared with 2010. In addition one Palestinian
was killed and 101 injured by Israeli soldiers during clashes with Israeli
settlers. Eight Israeli settlers were killed and 30 others injured by
Palestinians in 2011, compared with five killed and 43 injured during 2010.
Nearly 10 000 Palestinian-owned trees were damaged by Israeli settlers in 2011.
Although the Israeli army recently stepped up interventions against settler
violence, ninety per cent of cases filed with the Israeli police concerning
settler violence are closed without indictments. In the West Bank the de facto moratorium on
the death penalty continued. The new draft penal code foresees the
abolition of the death penalty. Death sentences continued to be issued and carried
out in the Gaza Strip. Concerning the prison
system, conditions of detention in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
continued to be a matter of concern, with the Independent Commission for Human
Rights (ICHR) noting on-going serious violations of detainees’ rights by
security agencies and patterns of ill-treatment and torture across the oPt.
Between July and December 2011, the ICHR received 435 complaints against the
security and police services in the oPt, 55 of which included claims of torture
and/or ill-treatment. For the third consecutive year, the ICHR has been
prevented from visiting the Internal Security detention compounds. Moreover,
there has still not been any documented evidence of the punishment of violators
because of the lack of transparency of the military court system and of
disciplinary mechanisms in the security services. Following the release of
Palestinian prisoners in Israeli detention in exchange for the release of
Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, at the end of 2011, 4 281 Palestinian prisoners
remained in Israeli detention of whom 135 were children including one in
administrative detention. Concerning women’s rights, in May
2011, the Ministry of Women Affairs in Ramallah launched the Cross Sectoral
National Gender Strategy which paves the way for a better integration of gender
equality issues in all PA ministries. In June 2011, following the discovery of
an honour killing, President Abbas announced a Presidential Decree freezing a
clause of the 1960 Jordanian penal code granting leniency to perpetrators.
Although this was welcomed as a first step by women’s organizations, only a thorough
reform of the penal code can ensure proper justice for victims of honour
killings. Furthermore, Israeli occupation had an
adverse impact on freedom of religion, economic and social rights,
children’s rights and property rights. On regional and
international issues, the EU continued its efforts
to encourage both the Israelis and the Palestinians to return to the
negotiating table, while also leading efforts to reinvigorate the Quartet. In
its statement on 23 September, the Quartet called for the resumption of direct
bilateral negotiations without delay or preconditions, the aim being to reach
an agreement within a timeframe agreed to by the parties but by the end of 2012
at the latest. The Quartet called upon the parties to refrain from provocative
actions and reiterated the obligations under the Roadmap. The
Palestinians refused to re-enter negotiations without an Israeli settlement
freeze, including in East Jerusalem, a demand with which Israel did not comply. On the contrary, in response to the Palestinian bid for full UN membership
and to Palestine’s admission as a member of UNESCO, Israel announced plans to
step up settlement building. After UNESCO admitted Palestine as a member, Israel temporarily suspended the transfer of Palestinian tax revenues to the PA, contrary
to its obligations under the Paris Protocol. On 9 October in
Brussels, the High Representative hosted Quartet envoys and the parties, the
latter stating their readiness to engage in line with the Quartet statement.
Under the auspices of the Quartet, this process brought about the first direct
meeting of the parties’ negotiators on 3 January 2012. Settlement construction and expansion
continued in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem with a surge in settlement
activity at the end of 2011. The proposed constructions in Givat Hamatos are
of particular concern as they would sever Palestinian geographic contiguity
between Jerusalem and Bethlehem.
3.
Economic and social reform
Macroeconomic framework and
functioning market economy
The economy of
the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) grew by 9.5% in the first half of 2011
although there was a sharp contrast between the Gaza Strip ( 20%) that began to
recover due to the 2010 slight loosening of the Israeli blockade, and the West
Bank where growth declined to just 5.7%. The slowdown in
the West Bank was the result of a decrease in donor aid, fiscal retrenchment
and a 9% drop in agricultural output during the first semester, reflecting
difficulties in access to markets and land. Whilst many of the West Bank's
gains in recent years are attributable to a partial relaxation of closure
restrictions, no further easing took place in the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) in 2011. The rapid
growth in the Gaza Strip - which accounts for around 25% of total Palestinian
GDP - mainly represented a base effect, and GDP per capita in Gaza remains well
below that in the West Bank. Almost half of Gaza's growth came from its construction
sector, which had dramatically declined owing to Israeli restrictions on the import
of building materials. Agriculture and fishing also grew by 27% year-on-year. The Palestinian Authority (PA) continued its efforts to reduce the
structural deficit, increasing tax collection and lowering spending in line
with the Action Plan and the Palestinian National Development Plan. However, by
October the PA had only received 35% of pledged donor contributions, despite
the EU’s front-loading of its disbursements at the PA’s request. The most
significant delayed payments were from Arab donor countries, although the US also suspended aid worth EUR 149 million in response to the PA's bid for statehood recognition
at the UN. All of this created a problem for the PA’s finances, as donor
contributions were to cover 45% of 2011 expenditures. The PA was forced to fill its funding gap by borrowing from domestic
banks. However, by May it reached the banks’ financing limit - borrowing just
under EUR 700 million from them - and as a result the PA has since been
building up large arrears. The fiscal situation could deteriorate further if
there is a renewed suspension of clearance revenue (import duties collected by Israel on the PA’s behalf) accounting for approximately 70% of the PA's non-aid revenue.
Employment and social policy
High unemployment rates (20.2%), low
participation rate (around 42% of the labour force), low wages and high rates
of poverty against the background of rapid population growth continue to be
crucial concerns. This refers in particular to unemployment rates in Gaza and youth unemployment, which are particularly high. A National Employment Strategy
under the National Development Plan was released in April 2011. The women’s
participation rate remains exceptionally low (16% against 70% for men) and
unemployment among women is 10% higher than among men. In July 2011, the
by-laws regulating the National Women’s Employment Committee were endorsed and
a number of workshops and conferences were held. The Committee should act as
an advisory platform to policy making. A national tri-partite Socio-economic
Council was set up with the aim of facilitating social dialogue.
However, adoption of by-laws is still necessary to make the Council
operational. On social protection and the fight
against poverty, the Palestinian Fund for Employment
and Social Protection was reactivated. A social
development strategy group was established, including relevant ministries, NGOs
and donors. In May 2011, the PA adopted a Business
Strategy (2011-2013) of the Ministry of Social Affairs (which also covers Gaza). The EU supported the institutional capacity building of the Ministry of Social
Affairs. Further progress was made in the
implementation of the Cash Transfer
Programme (CTP) which is a part of the Palestinian
National Programme for Social Protection and targets
families below the extreme poverty line. In October 2011 full coverage was extended to the Gaza Strip, bank accounts for
beneficiaries were opened, and cash transfer payments were fully integrated into
the PA’s centralised accounting system. The CTP total caseload of
eligible beneficiaries in the West Bank and Gaza rose to over 75,500, for an
estimated annual cost of over EUR64 million, with over EUR29 million of EU
contributions in 2011.
4.
Trade-related issues, market and regulatory
reform
In 2011 oPt was the smallest trading partner for the EU in the
Euro-Mediterranean region, with total trade amounting to EUR 99 million in 2011
with the majority accounted for by EU exports (EUR 87 million). EU–oPt
bilateral trade contracted by 13% year-on-year (2010: EUR114 million) after
having doubled in 2010. The oPt ranks in 164th
position among the EU's major partners. EU imports from the oPt were just EUR 12
million in 2011, a third of what the EU imported in 2010. These consist mainly
of agricultural products (75%). EU exports to oPt increased by 8% over the same
period and reached EUR 87 million. These include machinery and transport
equipment (51%), chemicals (15%) and agricultural products (10.3%). In September 2011, the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO) joined the Agadir free trade agreement, whose signatories
are Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt and Jordan. Participation in the Agadir free trade
area is expected to integrate the oPT into the regional trading system. The Agreement between the EU and the PA on
the further liberalisation of trade in agriculture, processed
agricultural products, and fish and fisheries products, concluded in 2011,
entered into force in 2012. Palestinian customs trained its
staff on the use of the latest version of the automated system for customs data
and negotiated data exchange with its Israeli counterpart. The EU provided
training to develop competency in the area of pan-Euro-Mediterranean rules of
origin. A customs court of appeal was established. The PA amended its tax law, providing
more flexibility to the Government to modify the tax rate and to widen the tax
base, hence improving tax collection. The oPt suffers from fiscal leakages that
co-operation with Israel would help to contain. Discussions between the two
administrations started in February 2011 but were interrupted following the May
2011 Palestinian reconciliation Agreement. The PA and the EU
cooperated on sanitary and phyto-sanitary (SPS) issues. An assessment under the EU TAIEX programme noted
various gaps in the SPS legislation and in institutional capacity. A food
safety strategy and SPS legislation are being prepared,
aiming to support public health and sustainable economic development of primary
production, food processing and retail sectors. The improvement of the investment
climate in 2011 was severely hampered by the closures imposed by the
Israeli government on both the West Bank and Gaza.
These restrict the movement of goods and people both within and across borders,
thereby increasing labour and transport costs and strongly discouraging private
and foreign investment. The oPt’s ranking in the World
Bank's "Doing Business 2012" annual report fell from 128 to 131,
compared with the previous year. No regulatory reforms were undertaken in
the area of financial services. The banking sector remained stable and credit conditions
improved. The
share of non-performing loans continued to decrease and reached about 3% in
mid-2011. The Palestinian Monetary Authority continued
to progress towards the implementation of Basel II standards and worked with
commercial banks stress tests in line with these principles.
Other Key Areas
The PA procurement
law was adopted in July 2011, reflecting, to a large
extent, the essence of the United Nation Commission on International trade Law
Model Procurement Law (1994). The law established a Higher Council for Public
Procurement Policies that will assume an oversight role and ensure compliance
with legislation. It also established a complaint mechanism and a dispute
review body. The Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics
(PCBS) published in 2011 the accelerated data program
on the PCBS website and built the Palestinian economic module for forecasting. The transition from the General Data Dissemination Standard to the
Special Data Dissemination Standard was completed in 2011. Results of the first
ever 2010 agriculture census were published in 2011. The PCBS resumed its
operations in Gaza in early 2011, after a suspension dating back to the 2007
census operations. In future, the PCBS should improve cooperation with other
administrations to increase the use of administrative data sources and more
systematically report on data quality, including on metadata. As regards public finance management and
external audit, the EU continued to support the PA
Supreme Audit Institution, State Audit and administrative Control Bureau
(SAACB) with technical assistance. The financial
statements for the year 2009 were sent by the Ministry of Finance to the SAACB
in early 2011 and their audit was completed in September 2011. The Ministry of
Finance created a macro-fiscal unit, which will increase its capacity to
analyse macroeconomic and fiscal data and report on budget execution.
Legislative amendments to the pension system were finalised in May 2011 and
submitted to the council. As a contribution to
reducing net lending in the context of Public Finance Management, the EU is
also providing support to the restructuring of the electricity providers and to
installing pre-paid meters. The enterprise policy of the PA received
substantial support from international donors to revive the private sector, in
particular in Gaza. Financial assistance was provided to businesses that need
to restore production machinery, office equipment and re-build facilities and
other business premises damaged or destroyed by the conflict. In January the
1998 investment law was amended by presidential decree. It now provides for simpler
investment procedures, reform of the Palestinian Investment Promotion Agency
(PIPA) and tax exemptions and incentives. The PA participated in implementing the
2011-2012 industrial cooperation work programme that Euro-Mediterranean
Industry Ministers adopted on 11-12 May 2011 in Malta.
5.
Energy, environment, transport, research and innovation
Due to the
political situation, the provision of transport
operations remained limited, especially in light of
the closure of the Gaza Strip, the absence of sovereignty and limited access to
certain areas in the West Bank. Nonetheless the transport sector remains a
vital recovery tool for the Palestinian economy. The PA adopted a revised
transport strategy in April 2011. Restructuring of the public passenger
transport is ongoing and the independent roads regulator remained to be
established. In 2011, the
PA adopted an energy strategy until 2013 and pursued electricity sector
reform, with EU assistance aimed at reducing net lending. The Electricity
Regulatory Council, which was strengthened, adopted licensing rules and a
tariff methodology. The PA made progress on the establishment of regional
electricity distribution companies and prepared the construction of a power
plant in the Northern West Bank. It continued developing Gaza and West Bank electricity networks including in rural areas. To improve bill collection rates,
the PA installed additional pre-paid electricity meters. The PA implemented
energy efficiency measures and developed renewable energy projects, solar
energy in particular. Energy efficiency and renewable energy plans are in
preparation. The EU remains committed to re-launching trilateral energy
cooperation with the Palestinian Authority and Israel. In the field of climate change, sub-regional co-operation (Israel, Jordan, Palestine) was launched on the impact of climate change on water availability. The reform of
the environment and water sectors continued. The National Development
Plan (2011-2013) identifies water supply, sewage treatment, solid waste
management, sustainable use and conservation of natural resources as well as
public awareness as key issues. Construction of wastewater treatment plants
continued in the Gaza Strip. The state of the environment in the Gaza Strip continues
to be a serious concern, exacerbated by the restrictions on the Environmental
Quality Authority’s (EQA) ability to operation in the area. Works continued to
drill new wells in the West Bank and to build a new water supply system. Environmental
impact assessments were carried out for a number of infrastructure projects. The Cabinet
endorsed the environment sector strategy for 2011–2013, and the EQA prepared the
related action plan for 2012-2014. The Cabinet also endorsed the bylaw on environmental
conditions for stone and marble cutting industry. The EQA developed a National
strategy for combating desertification as well as plans on solid waste
management. The Palestinian Water Authority
released the final report of the institutional water sector review, which
recommends measures to reform the water and sanitation sector institutions.
Water and wastewater is a focal issue of EU-Palestine co-operation, including
the financing of a small-scale desalination plant in Gaza. In 2011, EUR22
million was allocated for water sanitation and reuse in the West Bank. With regard to civil
protection, the Civil Defence and the Ministry of Women’s Affairs launched
an action programme aimed at raising the awareness of Palestinian women. The Palestinian
Authority intensified
cooperation with the countries from the region and the exchange of best
practices with the EU in the field of disaster prevention, preparedness and
response through its participation in the EU Programme for Prevention of,
Preparedness for, and Response to natural and man-made disasters. On the information society sector,
the law on setting up an independent regulatory authority, which was enacted by
presidential decree in 2011, has not been implemented as a result of political
disagreement over the legal basis for this decree and the recruitment of the
Board. This caused the World Bank to freeze its activities, and also US aid has halted its activities in telecoms for now. The Ministry
of Telecommunications and Information Technology is nonetheless trying to
modernise the sector, for example by preparing number portability. However, it
seriously lacks resources - in particular for the introduction of a licensing
system. On audiovisual issues, the draft of
the broadcasting law addressing certain restrictions on
media freedom has yet to be
adopted. In the area of research and technology,
participation by Palestinian researchers in the 7th Framework
Programme for Research (FP7) in 2011 increased. Up to mid-October 2011, the PA
had 11 signed grant agreements, involving 11 participants from the occupied
Palestinian territory and benefiting from an EU financial contribution of EUR0.9
million. The occupied Palestinian territory has an appointed National Contact
Point Coordinator and participates in the Mediterranean Innovation and Research
Action project, which contributes to setting up and training this NCP.
6.
People-to-people contacts, education and health
The Palestinian Authority remained highly
committed to the implementation of the Education Development Strategic
Plan 2008-2012. However, challenges persisted, such as lack of infrastructure,
high drop-out in certain geographical areas, access by the poorest students to
higher education, as well as high dependence on donor financial support. The
situation in East Jerusalem is of particular concern. The EU/World Bank
Project on Tertiary Education was extended until June 2011; it aimed to foster
employability of students and bridge labour market gaps and was positively
assessed. The EU continued to support the implementation of the Teacher
Education Strategy. As regards EU-oPT higher education
cooperation, no consortia or partnerships involving institutions from the
occupied Palestinian territory could be selected under the Erasmus Mundus programme
in 2011. Two additional Tempus university cooperation projects
involving the oPt were selected, in line with the participation of previous
years. At the end of 2011 the oPt was involved in nine projects, including six
multi-country projects, offering access to international networks and the
possibility to modernise curricula and the quality of teaching and learning. Unlike
2010, no project under the Jean Monnet programme (aimed at fostering EU
integration studies) was selected in 2011, nor did the oPt participate in Marie
Curie research collaboration. Palestinian involvement in these
programmes should be enhanced. On
a more positive note an increasing number of Palestinian youth and youth
organisations benefitted from the Youth in Action programme (56 projects
targeting 236 young people/youth workers compared to 31 projects and 98 young
people/youth workers in 2010). In the framework of the Torino Process, the European
Training Foundation (ETF), in cooperation with main stakeholders, carried out
an analysis of oPt vocational education and training (VET) policies.
Major challenges were identified in the fields of teacher training and VET
costing. ETF took initiatives to improve the relevance of VET, reinforce the
role of social partners and strengthen partnership between public VET
institutions and the private sector at local level. The EU is supporting a EUR4
million programme to assist of the implementation of the national Palestinian Technical Vocational Education and Training strategy in three target governorates. The PA developed a cross-cutting Youth
Strategy for 2011-2013. On this basis, work started to develop related action
plans, as well as setting out priorities in the area of youth integration. An
increasing number of Palestinian youth and youth organisations benefitted from
the Youth in Action programme (43 projects targeting 176 young people
compared to 31 projects and 98 persons in 2010. Five projects under the 2009/2010 Culture
programme's special actions continued to run. No additional project was
selected in 2011. Ten Palestinian candidates were selected to participate in
the Euromed Scuola 2011 event in November 2011 in Strasbourg. The oPt continued
to directly benefit from the Euromed Heritage IV programmes. The PA started implementing its health strategy 2011–2013 including by
rehabilitating health care facilities, establishing a chronic diseases centre
and further preparing a health insurance law. Availability of medicines in the
oPt and access by patients and medical personnel to East Jerusalem hospitals
remained difficult. The PA participated in the EU-supported
‘Episouth Plus’ project aimed at increasing health
security in the Mediterranean region and South East Europe network on communicable diseases for the EU, Mediterranean and
Balkan countries. The EU provided various types of support to the health sector
including East Jerusalem hospitals, mental health, salaries, medicines,
rehabilitation services, emergency preparedness and primary health care
including mobile health clinics to facilitate care in areas where movement of
persons is limited due to the political situation.