| Occupation 1967 - 1997:
Stop Ethnic Cleansing in Jerusalem
ID Card Confiscation Update
In response to pressure from
the United States, especially prior to the latest visit of US special envoy
Dennis Ross in early May 1997, Prime Minister Netanyahu held a series of
talks aimed at finding ways for easing up on ID card confiscation in Jerusalem.
However, while the Netanyahu government may be in the defensive and thus
ready for “good will gestures”, the Interior Ministry - much less concerned
about Israel’s diplomatic fame - announced that it planned to continue
confiscating ID cards of Arabs leaving the city as permitted by the Israeli
law.
Netanyahu: “We Will Stop
ID Card Confiscations”
In a first meeting, Prime
Minister Netanyahu, Minister of Interior Eli Suissa, Secretary of the Prime
Minister Dani Nave, and State Legal Advisor Eliakim Rubinstein discussed
in a special meeting the possibility of returning some of the confiscated
ID cards in the framework of Israeli gestures. (al-Quds, 3-5-1997)
The next day, David Bar
Ilan, spokesman of the office of the Prime Minister announced that Netanyahu
had decided to stop ID card confiscations from Jerusalemites who work or
live outside the municipal boundaries. He said that these residents “are
not exactly immigrants” since they are people born here. Therefore, the
law should be changed so that their Israeli ID cards will no longer be
routinely confiscated if they move out of Jerusalem. (Ha-Aretz 4-5; al-Quds
5-5)
Minister of Interior: “We
Will Continue Against Netanyahu’s Wish”
In response, Interior Minister
Eli Suissa declared in an official press announcement that “permanent residents
of Israel will continue to lose their resident status - and consequently
their ID card - if they meet one of the following conditions:
1. if the person stays outside
of Israel for consecutive seven years; “Arabic Jerusalem” is part of Israel
and subject to Israeli law. Accordingly, persons who transfer the center
of their lives outside the city boundaries are subject to this law.
2. if the person obtains
permanent residency in another country;
3. if the person obtains
citizenship of another country.” (al-Quds quoting from Ha-Aretz, 6-5-1997).
In a statement preceding
the above by one day, the Interior Ministry explained that it was not planning
to cancel the resident status of all the 60,000 Jerusalemites living outside
the city boundaries. The issue was rather that - in the period of January
- May 1997, the Ministry found that in 358 cases of Palestinian Jerusalemites
the permanent residency had expired. In addition, the Ministry had a list
of 1017 cases which - based on a first evaluation - were expected to be
in a similar situation. However, the latter were offered an opportunity
to show their documents and each case was studied individually. As a result,
186 of these cases were found to be still living in Jerusalem [and their
ID cards were returned; ART74] and 402 cases are still being studied [and
429 were confiscated; ART74]. (al-Quds, 5-5-1997)
Based on the above, ID card
confiscation are expected to continue, despite US pressure, and despite
the fact that in 186 cases, the Ministry was forced to return ID cards
confiscated by mistake (e.g. case of Faten Abu Khdeir in ARTICLE 74/19).
However, if the pressure is kept on Netanyahu, Netanyahu may keep up pressure
on Suissa to constrain ID card confiscations. This could be significant
now, at the beginning of the summer season, the time when Jerusalemites
living abroad come to visit their relatives in the city.
Defending Palestinian Presence
in Jerusalem: A Piecemeal Success
The Case of Marwa Aref Arafat
Tamini:
Marwa is a 14 year old Jerusalemite.
Since the death of her mother in 1988, she has been living in Dar-al-Tifl
Boarding School in Jerusalem, and her uncle has acted as her guardian.
In spring 1997, Marwa received an invitation to visit Germany in the framework
of a youth program. Marwa, accompanied by her uncle, approached the Interior
Ministry for a travel document (“laissez passer”). To their surprise, they
were informed that the Ministry would not issue her a travel document,
because - since her mother died - her Jerusalem registration and ID number
were not longer valid. Marwa was told to ask for registration on her father’s
West Bank ID card.
On 13 May 1997, Marwa asked
the AIC’s legal aid program for assistance. Following initial refusals,
the director of the Interior Ministry office promised Atty. Lea Tsemel
to study the case seriously, if Marwa could document that her mother had
died. Marwa was finally issued a Jerusalem travel document, however, the
Ministry emphasized that there was no direct connection between this travel
document and her future eligibility for a Jerusalem ID card (the case of
her ID card continues to be handled by Atty. Lea Tsemel/AIC Residency &
Refugee Rights Project). |