Nine UNRWA Staff May Have Been Involved in Oct. 7 Attack on Israel, Says UN

Internally displaced Palestinians at a makeshift camp built among the rubble in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 03 August 2024. (EPA)
Internally displaced Palestinians at a makeshift camp built among the rubble in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 03 August 2024. (EPA)
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Nine UNRWA Staff May Have Been Involved in Oct. 7 Attack on Israel, Says UN

Internally displaced Palestinians at a makeshift camp built among the rubble in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 03 August 2024. (EPA)
Internally displaced Palestinians at a makeshift camp built among the rubble in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 03 August 2024. (EPA)

Nine staff members of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNWRA) may have been involved in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, and have been fired, the United Nations said on Monday.

"For nine people, the evidence was sufficient to conclude that they may have been involved in the seventh of October attacks," deputy spokesperson Farhan Haq told a UN briefing.

He was referring to findings of the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services, which he said had completed an investigation into the alleged involvement of 19 UNRWA staff members in the attacks, two of whom have since died.

Monday's announcement confirms the dismissal of nine of them, Haq said. He said the records of the remainder would be reviewed.

Haq said all the nine individuals who the investigation concluded may have been involved were men. He did not give details of what they may have done, but said:

"For us, any participation in the attacks is a tremendous betrayal of the sort of work that we are supposed to be doing on behalf of the Palestinian people."

The United Nations launched the investigation after Israel charged in January that 12 UNRWA staff took part in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks that triggered the Gaza war. Seven more cases were brought to the UN's attention in March and April.

Israel stepped up its accusations in March, saying over 450 UNRWA staff were military operatives in Gaza terrorist groups. UNRWA employs 32,000 people across its area of operations, 13,000 of them in Gaza.

Shortly after the UN announcement, Israeli military spokesperson Nadav Shoshani posted on social media platform X, saying "Your 'relief' agency has officially stooped to a new level of low and it is time that the world sees your true face."

The UN's Haq said the United Nations investigation had made findings in relation to 19 UNRWA staff members. Apart from those who may have been involved in the attack, no evidence was obtained to support allegations of one staff member's involvement, while in the other cases the evidence was insufficient to support their involvement.

UNWRA said in March that some employees released into Gaza from Israeli detention reported having been pressured by Israeli authorities into falsely stating that the agency has Hamas links and that staff took part in the Oct. 7 attacks.

Haq said the details of the OIOS investigation were confidential and that since information used by Israeli authority officials to support their allegations have remained in their hands, "OIOS was not able to independently authenticate most of the information provided to it."

However, when pressed on why the UN was acting against nine, he said: "We have sufficient information in order to take the actions that we're taking, which is to say, the termination of these nine individuals."

Asked if this meant the UN considered that the nine were "likely or highly likely" to have been part of the attacks, he replied: "That's a good way of describing it."



Tunisian Court Jails 4 Presidential Candidates, Bars Them from Elections

A woman walks near the Palace of Justice in Tunis, Tunisia May 13, 2024. (Reuters)
A woman walks near the Palace of Justice in Tunis, Tunisia May 13, 2024. (Reuters)
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Tunisian Court Jails 4 Presidential Candidates, Bars Them from Elections

A woman walks near the Palace of Justice in Tunis, Tunisia May 13, 2024. (Reuters)
A woman walks near the Palace of Justice in Tunis, Tunisia May 13, 2024. (Reuters)

A Tunisian court on Monday sentenced four potential presidential election candidates to eight months in prison and banned them from running for office on a charge of vote buying, politicians and a lawyer told Reuters.

The decision was issued against prominent politician Abdel Latif Mekki, activist Nizar Chaari, Judge Mourad Massoudi and another candidate, Adel Dou, said lawyer Mokthar Jmai.

Ahmed Nafatti, the manager of Mekki's campaign, said they still planned to submit his candidacy papers on Tuesday.

"The decision is unfair and unjust, and aims to exclude a serious player from the race," Nafatti said.

"It is a shocking rule, it aims to keep us away from running for the race after a series of restrictions," Chaari told Reuters.

The elections are set for October 6.

Another court late on Monday sentenced Abir Moussi, also a prominent opponent of President Kais Saied, to two years in prison, on a charge of insulting the election commission, local Mosaique radio reported.

Last month, a court sentenced Lotfi Mraihi, a potential presidential election candidate and fierce critic of Saied, to eight months in prison on a charge of vote buying. It also banned him from running in presidential elections.

Elected in 2019, Saied dissolved parliament in 2021 and began ruling by decree in a move the opposition described as a coup. He has said he will not hand over power to what he calls "non-patriots."

Opposition parties, many of whose leaders are in prison, have accused Saied's government of exerting pressure on the judiciary to crack down on his rivals in the 2024 elections and pave the way for him to win a second term.

Saied has denied placing any restrictions on rivals.

"There are no restrictions on potential candidates for the presidential elections... this is nonsense and lies," Saied told reporters on Monday after submitting his official candidacy file.

Earlier on Monday, at least four other prominent potential candidates said the election commission had imposed a new restriction by demanding they submit their police record in order to register, but that the interior ministry had refused to provide those records.