"• Three hours ago, recipients of Palestinian Authority terror payments living in Jordan reported receiving their Pay-for-Slay salaries. • Recipients reported receiving the same amount as in the past. • Dozens of payments were made to accounts in known banks.
Recipients of Palestinian Authority terror stipends residing in Jordan reported over the last three hours that their monthly payments had been deposited into their bank accounts. According to multiple firsthand accounts, the sums transferred were identical to those received previously, suggesting that the payment scale remains unchanged. Reports further indicate that dozens of transfers were processed through recognized banking institutions.
PMW has received confirmation from several recipients and a shared bank notification.
In one exchange, a recipient announced: ‘Jordan salaries have officially entered the bank – for released prisoners and wounded. Praise Allah.’ Another responded: ‘Praise Allah... Hopefully soon to us as well.’ A third participant asked whether the payments had been reduced: ‘How much did you get, at what rate? As before or reduced?’ The reply came back: ‘As before.’ An administrator in the same discussion added: ‘Payment in Lebanon [will also be] today, please Allah.’
Additional correspondence echoed the same development. One individual wrote: ‘The salaries of the Martyrs in Jordan have been deposited, so they say.’ Another replied: ‘Right, they were transferred to the banks, we are waiting for the banks,’ followed again by: ‘Praise Allah.’...
According to PMW’s assessment, the Palestinian Authority still continues to distribute terror salaries despite prior assurances to Western donor such as
@EU_Commission
and
@EmmanuelMacron
that such payments had been canceled and replaced with welfare-based assistance. The payments now appear to be continuing in areas believed to be beyond direct donor oversight, including Jordan and Lebanon. While the PA has indicated it intends to maintain payments to all recipients, it clearly has not yet determined how to do so in the PA areas without attracting international scrutiny."
