| Deportations from the
West Bank Renewed
In summer 1994, Khaula Salem,
a young Palestinian woman raised in Jordan, arrived to the West Bank on
a visit permit in order to marry Khaled Karmeh from Bethlehem. At the end
of October, the newly-wed couple was summoned to the Bethlehem civil administration.
On November 3, Khaled met with Captain Gil who informed him that his wife’s
visit permit would not be renewed because she does not belong to the population
protected by current agreements, and that she has to leave the country
immediately. Then, Captain Gil confiscated Khaled’s ID card and told him
that he would return it only after his wife’s departure.
Similar summons were issued
to approximately 30 persons living in the Bethlehem area; and dozens in
the northern West Bank. Palestinian residents of the West Bank, especially
those who had married recently, contacted human rights institutions for
help. Yehuda Cohen, the officer in charge at Bet El headquarters of the
Israeli Civil Administration, claimed that there was no new policy of deportation,
that the summons were a personal initiative of local civil administration
officers, and that all confiscations of ID cards were illegal. Consequently,
confiscated IDs were returned, and human rights lawyers obtained temporary
restraining orders for their clients. Much damage was prevented by successful
cooperation between the local population and human rights organizations.
However, many others were unable to obtain legal assistance, and the initiative
resulted in an unknown number of newly-separated Palestinian families.
Moreover, those who resisted the measure have had to face frequent and
difficult meetings at the Civil Administration, as well as the constant
threat of heavy fines and ultimate deportation. In at least one documented
case, a husband was frightened into making his wife leave the West Bank,
although she has protected status and is eligible for a six-month renewable
visit permit and family reunification. Since the wife went to Jordan, the
Israeli authorities have refused to correct the mistake. They have rejected
the husband’s application for a new visit permit on the grounds that the
policy is to issue visit permits only during the summer season.
Temporary restraining orders
are not the solution, and the problem remains: the official Israeli stand
is that married non-resident spouses do not have a right to stay in the
country on renewable visit permits, and that the fact that a compromise
was achieved for a certain population (6,000 spouses who entered the country
between 1990 and August 1993) does not reflect a principled policy change. |