| The Case of the Month:
An Odyssey with a Lucky Ending
Hassan Muhammad Hassan Shahin,
from Jabalya refugee camp (Gaza), married his cousin, Amal Muhammad Hussein
Abu Watfe, in Saudi Arabia in 1980. His wife was born in Gaza, but had
left in 1966. The couple has five children: Muhammad (10), Reem (9), Ahmad
(7), Fatmeh (5), and Miryam (3). None of the children are registered on
their father’s identity card.
Immediately after the Gulf
War they left Saudi Arabia, first to the Sudan, then to Libya. From Libya
they flew to Egypt, since Hassan had left Gaza through Egypt and must re-enter
that way. But Egypt refused to let Amal, holder of an Egyptian travel document
and a visitor’s permit to Gaza, and her children in.
The family spent a week
at the Egyptian airport before returning to Libya. Amal’s sister managed
to obtain a visitor’s permit routed through Jordan. The family then flew
to Amman. Amal and her children were allowed three days for transit; they
entered the Occupied Territories on July 24, 1991.
Hassan returned to Egypt
and entered Gaza through Rafah. The family had spent months and over US
$ 10,000 in going from Saudi Arabia to Gaza.
When, on June 22, 1992,
Hassan tried to renew Amal’s permit, the civil administration confiscated
her visitor’s permit and Egyptian travel document and said that she had
to be deported. They also said that they would fine her NIS 5,000 for overstaying.
Because of the suspension
of deportations from the West Bank, the legal advisor’s office in the Gaza
Strip instructed the civil administration to return Amal’s documents. Hassan
was told that Amal should leave, but she remains, undocumented, but apparently
somewhat protected.
According to Hassan, a number
of families from Jabalya in similar situations have been deported to Jordan
during the past year. |