The Diplomatic-Security Cabinet is expected within two weeks to approve a major cut to the tax revenues Israel collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority, with the amount the PA pays to terrorists and their families to be deducted from the money Israel hands over to the PA.
The reduction will be enacted under a law passed this past summer by MKs Elazar Stern (Yesh Atid) and Avi Dichter (Likud), which requires the Defense Ministry to provide the cabinet with data on the amount the PA pays terrorists and their families. The Finance Ministry will then withhold that amount from the tax funds.
For some weeks, the Defense Ministry has been assiduously collecting figures to determine the exact amount the PA pays out in "terror salaries." According to the mechanism stipulated by the law, after a report on the salaries is presented, the Finance Ministry will carry out the deduction.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said in closed-door talks that the deduction will go ahead, although he expressed concern that the reduced tax funds would hurt the stability of the PA. He also said he would look for a way to carry out the demands of the law while ensuring that the PA remains stable.
Dichter, who serves as chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, said in response to recent reports on the amount of the PA terror salaries that "every shekel the Palestinian Authority pays to terrorists will be deducted [from the tax funds.] That is how we create deterrence against terrorism."
Israel Hayom recently reported that in 2018, the PA paid out 502 million shekels ($138 million) to living terrorists. A probe by the Palestinian Media Watch group showed that at least 230 million shekels ($63 million) had been paid to terrorists currently in prison.
The government ministries involved in the deduction have not yet specified the amount to be withheld from the tax revenues Israel will hand over to the PA.