Hundreds of Palestinians attended protests across the West Bank on Sunday against the Palestinian Authority’s new prisoner payment system. The public anger indicates that Ramallah is moving ahead with the Western-pushed welfare reform, after a series of illicit payments made under the old mechanism led to the firing of the PA finance minister last month.

Demonstrations were held in the cities of Ramallah, Tulkarem, and Nablus, with attendees including the families of prisoners, as well as relatives of individuals killed or wounded in attacks or clashes with Israeli forces.

Speakers at the rallies accused the PA of “criminalizing the Palestinian national struggle” and of trying to frame the stipends as welfare after the reform signed by PA President Mahmoud Abbas in February required that future payments be conditioned on financial need, rather than the length of a prisoner’s sentence.

The wife of one prisoner speaking at the Ramallah protest said her family, along with those of at least 1,612 inmates, have not received their monthly stipends in over eight months.

Israel has denied that the PA reform is in place, and its National Security Council dispatched a three-person delegation to Brussels in late November to make the case that payments have continued under the old system, which Jerusalem dubs “pay-to-slay,” accusing the PA of incentivizing attacks on Israelis.

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The delegation handed over a “big dossier” of evidence, a European official told The Times of Israel, saying it was not a hard case to make, given Abbas’s firing of PA foreign minister Omar Bitar for signing off on illicit payments made under the old mechanism.


Palestinians protest against the Palestinian Authority’s prisoner payments reform outside the Prime Minister’s Office in Ramallah on December 14, 2025. (Screen capture/YouTube)

The European Union is the largest foreign donor to the PA, but continued funds are linked to reforms by Ramallah, including of its prisoner payment system. “We are extremely unhappy after what happened last month. We are serious about the link of the EU money to their reform benchmarks,” the European official said.

The Foreign Ministry declined requests to provide the evidence it has backing its allegations against the PA, but a Western diplomat familiar with the matter told The Times of Israel that it falls short of a “smoking gun.”

Western countries are aware of the batch of stipends made last month that led to Bitar’s firing, but Israeli claims of a more widespread PA cover-up have yet to be proven, and a US-backed audit of the reform is expected to move ahead next year at Ramallah’s request, the diplomat said.

Recent weeks have seen an uptick in applications for welfare stipends through the revived National Economic Empowerment Institution known as “Tamkeen,” after initial months saw very little Palestinian buy-in to the unpopular reform, a PA official said.

Particularly unpopular time for reform

Those protesting on Sunday took particular issue with the PA advancing the new policy during a time of mounting allegations of mistreatment of Palestinian prisoners by Israeli authorities.

Israel’s own Public Defender’s Office said in a report earlier this month that Palestinian security prisoners have been held in increasingly dire conditions since the Hamas-sparked Gaza war, with many suffering from severe hunger.


Palestinians protest against the Palestinian Authority’s prisoner payments reform outside the Prime Minister’s Office in Ramallah on December 14, 2025. (Screen capture/YouTube)

On Sunday, the PA’s prisoner affairs office said that another Palestinian had died in the West Bank’s Ofer Prison, raising to 86 the number of prisoners to die in Israeli custody since October 7, 2023.

The PA identified the prisoner as Sakher Zaghoul and said he had been under administrative detention since June. The practice is controversial, enabling the holding of suspects indefinitely without charge or due process, and Defense Minister Israel Katz halted its use against Jews. It has remained in place for thousands of Palestinians, however, in what opponents of the PA welfare reform argue further justifies robust support for prisoners.

Organizers of the Sunday protests said similar demonstrations would continue and expand in the coming weeks.

The West Bank is already on edge amid widespread IDF counterterrorism operations that have displaced tens of thousands living in refugee camps across the territory.

Meanwhile, the olive harvest season, which is seen as essential for the struggling Palestinian economy, has again been marred by unchecked Israeli settler violence.

IDF checkpoints, which Israel justifies as necessary security measures, have also mushroomed throughout the West Bank. These have placed significant curbs on Palestinian movement, with many preferring not to travel between cities, as commutes that once took 15 to 30 minutes now extend to several hours in bumper-to-bumper traffic.


Palestinians rally as Israeli soldiers block the entrance of the Nur Shams Palestinian refugee camp, in the Israeli-occupied northern West Bank on December 15, 2025. (Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP)

Unemployment in the West Bank has also skyrocketed since October 7, with the IDF revoking work permits to an estimated 200,000 Palestinians, who had been employed in Israel, due to security concerns.

Additionally, Israeli limits on the banking sector have plunged the West Bank into a liquidity crisis, with Palestinian banks unable to offload excess shekels.

Smotrich approves 2-month extension to banking ties

Further complicating matters has been Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich’s pushback against granting Israeli banks indemnity to conduct transactions with Palestinian ones.

Western countries have been pushing Smotrich to sign a waiver permitting such cooperation to continue for an extended period of time, concerned that allowing the old waiver to expire would risk collapsing the Palestinian economy, given that the Oslo Accords, signed in the 1990s, require it to run on the Israeli shekel.

But the far-right finance minister, who has spoken in favor of dissolving the PA and of Israel annexing the West Bank, has bucked international pressure and has only agreed to offer limited extensions, while insisting on measures to boost Israeli settlements in exchange.

As another indemnity waiver deadline was about to expire at the end of November, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought to pass a cabinet decision that would strip Smotrich of his authority on the matter, an Israeli official told The Times of Israel, indicating that even the premier does not back the approach of his finance minister. However, Smotrich threatened to collapse the government, and Netanyahu backed off, the Israeli official said.


Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, the Religious Zionism party chair, attends a faction meeting in the Knesset in Jerusalem on December 8, 2025. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

Smotrich did agree to sign a two-week extension, and, before that one expired on Sunday, a two-month extension to indemnity for Israeli-Palestinian banking transactions was signed, three officials from separate governments said. The Finance Ministry declined to comment.

The latest extension came as the Israeli cabinet voted on Thursday to grant official status to 19 illegal outposts in the West Bank, including two that were vacated 20 years ago under the so-called disengagement plan. The proposal approved by the government was crafted by Smotrich.

While the PA blasted the move along with Arab and European countries, which took issue with Israel further limiting West Bank land available for a potential Palestinian state, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee defended the outpost legalizations, arguing that Jerusalem was acting within its rights.