Millions of dollars in donations from Evangelical Christian supporters
of Israel raised in the United States have been earmarked to renovate
bomb shelters, but much of the funding has been held up for months due
to bureaucratic wrangling, officials said Sunday.
The money, raised by the Chicago-based International Fellowship of
Christians and Jews, includes $10 million allocated to refurbish more
than 2,500 private building shelters in northern Israel, and $1.5m. to
repair all 60 public shelters in Sderot, which has been hit by
thousands of Kassam rockets from the Gaza Strip over the last six
years.
While the funding earmarked for Sderot shelters was accepted last month
by municipal officials, the funding allocated for the shelters in the
North is still pending final agreement with officials in the Prime
Minister's Office, the officials said.
"The situation in terms of the government's relationship with the home
front is a failure," said IFCJ founder and president Rabbi Yechiel
Eckstein.
After months of negotiations, an agreement was announced last month
whereby the government allocated NIS 55 million to repair over 3,000
public shelters in northern Israel, while the IFCJ was charged with
fixing more than 2,500 private building shelters for NIS 45m.
However, in the month since the announcement, technical and legal
details still need to be worked out, and no agreement has been reached
on beginning the work, officials said.
The Prime Minister's Office denied Sunday that they were any delays in
the work on the shelters in northern Israel, and voiced hope that a
final agreement with the IFCJ could be reached this week. An official
in the Prime Minister's Office added that work on the the shelters in
northern Israel should start by next month.
Eckstein said that his organization had come in to fill an "outrageous
void and vacuum" in the handling of the home front, but was dealing
with a government in "free-fall" for months following public backlash
over the inconclusive Second Lebanon War, and that had not charged one
single authority with homeland security.
He added that if there were any additional unreasonable delays, the
organization might choose to work directly with local authorities.
Sderot Mayor Eli Moyal accepted the IFCJ's offer after six years of the
government and the army insisting that fixing shelters was the city's
responsibility, a senior official in the Sderot Municipality said
Sunday.
"Anybody who knows our city, knows we don't have the financial
capability to renovate the city shelters," said city treasurer Shimon
Peretz.
Peretz added that city officials were left with "no choice" but to
accept the charity's offer to its shelters after years of government
refusal.
He noted that all of Sderot's public shelters should be refurbished
within two months.
"Hopefully, we will be better prepared for the next round," he said.
Founded in 1983, the IFCJ has raised nearly $400m. to support projects
in Israel and assist needy Jewish people throughout the world.
Last year, it approved over $38m. in immigration, absorption, and
social welfare projects, according to the group's annual summary.
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Funds for renovating shelters delayed
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