| Israeli Interior Ministry
Continues to “Stonewall” on Crucial Question of Lost Jerusalem Residency
Rights
Last year, after extensive
correspondence between the Alternative Information Center and the Israeli
Ministry of the Interior, in which the former attempted to obtain official
data concerning the number of Palestinian Jerusalemites who have been deprived
of their residency rights - and after the repeated refusals of the Interior
Ministry to divulge the information, the AIC filed a petition in the High
Court asking the court to order the Ministry to make the information public.
The right of the public to obtain information on the activities of governmental
bodies has been recognized by courts in Israel on numerous occasions. The
AIC was joined by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel and by Yishai
Menuhin (on behalf of the Coalition for Freedom of Information) as co-petitioners.
The petition also asked for disclosure for information on other issues,
such as the number of family reunification applications granted in Jerusalem.
In an apparent attempt to
convince the petitioners to withdraw their petition, on May 6, 1996, the
Ministry released new information concerning family reunification in Jerusalem.
[see below] However, it refused to release information on the matter of
lost residency rights, maybe due to the sensitivity of this issue in the
light of the current ID card confiscations.
Specifically, the AIC had
asked to know: the total number of East Jerusalem residents who have lost
their status as “permanent residents of Israel” since 1968; from among
the total, the number of those who are staying in the West Bank, the Gaza
Strip and the number who lost their residency rights after traveling abroad;
the number of those who have lost their residency rights who applied for
the return of their Jerusalem ID cards - and the number of such applications
which were approved.
The state-attorney’s office,
in explaining its refusal to divulge the requested information, stated:
”With regard to some of the inquiries no statistical data exists and with
regard to others - the data is partial ... The registry lists within the
collection of computerized registries, with regard to the subjects about
which information is requested, are not complete and therefore it is not
at present possible to conduct a statistical examination using our computers.”
“Subtracted” Residents
The petitioners are quite
skeptical regarding this claim, to say the least. It is known that the
Interior Ministry has kept computerized files on Jerusalem residents for
at least the past 15 years - and that one of the categories in these files
concerns residents who have been “subtracted”. This refers to Jerusalem
residents who have been removed from the Jerusalem population registry
not through death or by moving to another locality within the State of
Israel, but by administrative decision. The names of “subtracted” residents
are not actually removed from the computer files, but specially marked.
Thus, it should be quite easy for the Ministry to count the number of Palestinian
Jerusalemites who have lost their residency rights. But they still insist
on “stonewalling” regarding the disclosure of this information. The petitioners
have decided to continue with procedures in the High Court until full disclosure
is obtained. |