| Law Amendment to Stop
ID-Card Confiscation in Jerusalem Passed First Knesset Vote
The amendment submitted by
Azmi Bishara (Democratic Front - National Democratic Alliance) on 9 July
1997, proposes to add to the existing Law of Entry Into Israel (1952) a
paragraph reading:
In the explanation attached to the amendment, MK Bishara states: “The formal status of a permanent resident is based on the assumption that s/he is a foreigner entering the country ... which obviously is not the case with Jerusalem residents, for whom Jerusalem is their ‘homeland’ ... In the last year the Minister of Interior has used the Law to cancel the residency permit of many Jerusalem residents ... It seems that prior to the final status negotiations, Israel is conducting a policy of ‘silent deportation’, in order to reduce to a minimum the number of Palestinian residents in Jerusalem...” At the Knesset vote on the
proposed amendment in the afternoon of July 9, only a small number of Knesset
members were present, mainly due to the current crisis of Netanyahu’s government
coalition which - following the reshuffling of minister post - did not
yet have a new Head of Coalition. Netanyahu himself did not participate
in the vote, other Coalition lists (e.g. the new immigrants’ Israel B’Alia)
were also absent. Minister of Interior Eli Suissa, outraged by this disarray,
refused to give his speech against the amendment proposal. The vote passed
with 27 Mks voting in favor, one MK voting against, the rest absent or
abstained.
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