The United Nations agency dealing with Palestinian refugees said on Thursday tha hundreds of UN-run schools for Palestinian refugees will open on time after fresh funding temporarily staved off a financial crisis triggered by a US contributions freeze. In a statement, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) said all 711 schools it runs for 526,000 pupils in the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria would open for the coming school year. Half a million students will return to the schools on time “because it is crucial to protect the fundamental right to education for Palestinian refugee girls and boys,” it added. The schools are due to open over a staggered time period between August 29 and September 2. There had been warnings from UN chief Antonio Guterres and others that the schools might not be able to open due to funding shortages provoked by US President Donald Trumps decision to withhold aid to the Palestinians. At a specially convened session of the UNRWA Advisory Commission in Amman, Commissioner-General Pierre Krahenbuhl said that since the beginning of the year the agency had received $238 million in additional contributions after a funding drive but was not "out of the woods". "We currently only have funding to run the agencys services until the end of September," Krahenbuhl said in a statement. "We need a further $217 million to ensure that our schools not only open but can be run until the end of the year." In January, Trump tweeted "we pay the Palestinians HUNDRED OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year and get no appreciation or respect. They dont even want to negotiate a long overdue peace treaty with Israel." UNRWA has faced a $300 million freeze in funding from the United States as Trump demands unspecified changes to the agency and seeks to pressure the Palestinians to return to the negotiating table. Other countries have since provided additional contributions but UNRWA says it is not enough. The agency provides services to more than three million Palestinian refugees and their descendants across the Middle East and employs more than 20,000 people, the vast majority Palestinians. Last month, UNRWA announced it was cutting more than 250 jobs in the Palestinian territories due to the funding crisis. UNRWA was founded in 1949 after the first Arab-Israel war, which led to 700,000 Palestinians being forced to leave their homes or flee. It helps around 5 million Palestinian refugees, a figure that includes descendants of those displaced by the fighting. Israel argues the agency is biased against it and perpetuates the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. UN officials and others say that the agency provides vital services to the vulnerable communities under its mandate.
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