Israel on Wednesday accepted a decision by major Middle East peace brokers to 
resume aid payments to the Palestinian Authority -- a move that could ease the 
intense economic pressure on the Hamas-led government. 
The Authority relies hugely on foreign aid to pay public sector salaries and 
run health and welfare services, and the mediating powers decided reluctantly on 
Tuesday that there was no other way to stave off a possible collapse into 
anarchy. 
It was not clear whether they would find a way to channel funds through the 
overall Authority, led by President Mahmoud Abbas, without having them 
administered by Hamas -- an Islamic militant group officially sworn to Israel's 
destruction. 
But Israel, which had pushed hard and successfully for financial assistance 
to be severed after the Hamas-led administration took power in March, took the 
view that such a move would be possible. 
"As far as we are concerned, the Quartet's decision to give further 
humanitarian support to the Palestinian Authority, bypassing the Hamas 
government, is definitely okay," Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said on Army 
Radio. 
The Hamas-led government said it appreciated the Quartet's efforts to ease 
the burden on the Palestinian people but added that they could have gone 
further. 
In a statement, the government also criticized the prospect that it could be 
bypassed, saying: "We were hoping that their decision could be more positive in 
dealing with the Palestinian government since it is an elected government that 
represents the Palestinian people." 
Russia, the European Union and the United Nations had all put pressure on the 
United States, which has taken the toughest stand against Hamas, to agree to 
ease the boycott. 
The powers agreed that aid payments would be resumed for a three-month trial 
period, through a "transparent" mechanism that has yet to be worked out but may 
involve the World Bank. 
It is expected that salaries to the Palestinian Authority's 165,000 
employees, unpaid since March, will be settled. The monthly wage bill totals 
around $150 million. 
"If you need a hospital to be run, and someone has to be paid, he will be 
paid," EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana said after the initiative was 
announced.