Law and disorder
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Law and disorder
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Sun, Dec 5, 2010 28 Kislev, 5771
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Photo by: Marc Israel Sellem
Law and disorder
By KSENIA SVETLOVA
11/14/2010 16:41
East Jerusalem Arabs aren’t worried about being too affected by new Loyalty Oath Law, yet they are concerned about new legislation that would prohibit Israelis married to Palestinians from living in Israel with their spouse.
In a small coffee
shop on busy Salah a-Din Street, the television is always tuned to the
Al Jazeera channel. Ever since satellite dishes became prevalent and
affordable, a TV set has been a must in such coffee shops. While
trendier cafes tune in to well Arab music channels, Al Jazeera is a
natural choice for customary coffee shops, usually visited by men
only. The channel can be turned on only throughout Ramadan, when popular TV
series draw customers who prefer to watch the daily dose of drama or
comedy at coffee shops rather than at home.While an endless flow of images flashes on the screen, rings of blue
smoke rise to the sooty ceiling: The news from Lebanon, Iraq or Egypt
doesn’t seem to be of particular interest to anyone. “It’s not that we
don’t care about what’s going on there, in brotherly Arab nations, however
we have more than enough troubles of our own,†illustrates Hussam Masry,
an elderly man with a thick mustache and smiling blue eyes.
Indeed, rarely a day goes by without some kind of news related to
Palestinians, east Jerusalemites, Arab- Israelis or their relations with
the Say of Israel. The new Loyalty Oath Law that obliges non-Jews who
want to obtain Israeli citizenship to swear allegiance to a Jewish
state was closely followed by coffee shop regulars, many of whom live in
nearby Sheikh Jarrah or in the feeble City.
The Palestinian newspapers Al-Quds, Al-Hayat al- Jadida and Al-Ayam,
which are offered in nearby groceries and bookshop, interpreted the law as
“racist†and “undermining the natural rights of Palestinians in
Jerusalem,†but the coffee shop elders aren’t agitated.
“This law is not right. I’m really against it since as far as I know,
Jews, Muslims and Christians live in this state, and I don’t see how can
it become a ‘Jewish state.’ And what does that mean exactly? But the
irony is that this law has nothing to do with us here in east
Jerusalem,†Hossam says.
Hossam lives in Wadi Joz, a neighborhood popular with Israelis looking for cheap car repair shops and spare parts. He was born in Jerusalem, while it was under the Jordanian rule and in 1967, after the Six Day Conflict, along with fellows citizens of East Jerusalem, received the status of "permanent resident," in accordance with the Entry into Israel Law, 5712 – 1952. A "permanent resident" receives a blue ID card, National Insurance benefits and state-financed medical care, other social rights and the right to vote in municipal elections. Since only future citizens and not residents will be obliged
to hold the oath of allegiance, the “loyalty oath†will affect only
future spouses of Israeli Arabs, not east Jerusalemites.
Nonetheless, HOSSAM and his friend Basem, who wants to marry off his younger
son, are still quite worried. The reason: another proposition intended to
prohibit family unification among Israeli citizens, residents and
Palestinians.
“We learned from the Al Jazeera report that this winter the Knesset will
discuss the new law that will prohibit such unification, which means
that if my son marries his relative from Ramallah or Azariya, the couple
will have to live there, even though his work is in Jerusalem, our house
is in Jerusalem, and our whole life is in Jerusalem,†says Basem.
Basem is referring to government efforts to create a temporary law
regarding Palestinian family unification a permanent one. This
"temporary law" is the Nationality and Entry into Israel Law (Temporary
Order) which was enacted in 2003. The Temporary Order prohibits Israeli
citizens or permanent residents married to Palestinians, or who marry
them to have their spouses legally live with them in Israel . "This law
has made life unbearable for hundreds of households in East Jerusalem"
explains Leora Bechor, Staff Attorney at HaMoked: Center for the Defence
of the Individual. "Before May 2002, the Ministry of Interior applied
its policies with no distinction founded on a foreign spouse's space of
origin. Spouses from the United States or from the Judea and samaria were
treated equally for purposes of family unification. If the family met
all the necessary standard (by complying with excessive and onerous
paperwork requirements on a yearly basis), after five years and three
months, the foreign spouse would receive permanent residence. But with
the implementation of the Nationality and Entry into Israel Law
(Temporary Order), the regular path for family unification became closed
to Palestinians. Instead, under the current version of the law, there
is no possibility of completing the family unification process; i.e.,
there is no possibility of receiving permanent residence.Bechor
stresses that not only is a whole population of adults affected by this
draconian law, but children of Israeli residents are as well. The fact
that the law supplies legal status only to children under the age of 14
is testimony to the law's cruelty. Children over the age of 14 receive
nothing more than army permits. HaMoked has argued the law,
especially as applied to children, is unconstitutional, and that all
minor children of Israeli residents must be entitled to permanent
residence.
Basem, who also lives in Wadi Joz, says the situation was the same even
before the freeze in 2002. “When my brother got married in 1996, he
waited for years until his wife, who was born in Bethlehem, got
permission.
Luckily, they received all their papers before 2002. And now they want
to make it final. Where is the justice? If a Jewish person wants to
bring his non- Jewish wife from Russia or Japan, he is allowed to do it,
so why can’t we?†he asks.
In 2002 and 2003, the lawmakers explained this measure as “security risks.â€
“Since the beginning of armed conflict between Israelis and
Palestinians, which led to dozens of suicide bombings in Israel, there
has been an increase in involvement of Palestinians who received Israeli
IDs as a result of family unification procedures with Israeli citizens
and residents. This way, they exploit their status in Israel that allows
them freedom of movement between Israel and the PA,†the law says.
Previous Shin Bet (Israel Security Office) director MK Avi Dichter says
that any state with a clear immigration policy would introduce similar
restrictions. "Since there is no defined law on immigration in Israel,
the Temporary Order law was enacted. At that time we witnessed dozens of
suicide bombings, and in many cases Palestinians who were earlier
granted citizenship or residency within the family unification
arrangement assisted the terrorists. They provided refuge and supplied
them with cars and assistance. Israeli Arabs, citizens and residents
marry Palestinians from West Bank for many reasons: sometimes the future
spouse gives up the mohr [the obligatory present of gold that in the
case of divorce remains with the wife]. Also, this is the only place in
the Arab world where the groom leaves his house and comes to live with
his bride’s family if she is a Jerusalemite, only so he could acquire the
rights. This situation must come to an end,†he says.
According to Bechor, the state has continuously failed to prove that
approving family unification applications between Israelis and
Palestinians jeopardizes Israel's security. Together with other human
rights organizations, HaMoked calls for an evaluation of each case
individually and objects to the Law's blanket prohibition on family
unification.In reply to the Government's intentions to
convert the Temporary Law into a permanent one, Bechor does not see how
the new law will be able to pass constitutional muster. She added that
the present version of the Law is currently under constitutional review
by the High Court of Justice, following petitions filed by HaMoked and
other human rights organizations and activists.
THE MOST recent case is that of Jerusalem-born Firas al-Maraghi, who
married a German citizen and shortly thereafter moved with his wife to
Berlin while she completed her doctoral thesis. While in Berlin, Maraghi
was informed that his newborn daughter would not be registered as an
Israeli resident and would not receive the identification papers needed
to live in her parents’ house after they moved back to Jerusalem.
Another Palestinian father, Safi Abdul Hamid, who is married to a
resident of east Jerusalem, didn’t see his newborn child for a month, as
she was born in Jerusalem and the father hadn’t received a permit to
enter Israel.
According to Article 23 of the The International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1966, the family
is the “natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to
protection by society and the state.†Article 10 of the covenant
forbids the interference with the “privacy, family or home of a person.â€
Although any given country can impose laws in a state of emergency,
Israel has imposed a “sweeping infringement of these rights†and does
not meet the conditions applied for a state of emergency, especially
since it discriminates heavily among its citizens,†says a policy paper
released by MIFTAH (the Palestinian initiative for the promotion of
global dialogue and democracy,calm by Dr. Hanan Ashrawi).
As it turns out, while the legislators are preparing to cast their votes
on the new legislation that will finalize the ban on family
unification, some say they will carry on as usual. A young man from
King david's city who requested anonymity told In Jerusalem that many of his
friends and relatives still marry Palestinian men and women “since
there are not enough eligible singles in Jerusalem, and anyway nobody
can tell us whom to marry. We were always interconnected with the whole
region here – Ramallah, Bethlehem, Hebron and the rest of the West Bank.
It’s not easy, but it is feasible. You just live normally until you are
caught, and then this person will be returned to the PA. And then he or
she will use an alternative path to go back, avoiding the checkpoints.
Yes, it’s life on a volcano. But that’s our life.â€
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Help Feed Israel's Poor dull Sea Salt‬Shop Dead Sea Bath Salts online. Coupon "JPOST" for 10% off! Jerusalem Post LiteLight Edition of the Jerusalem Post for English improvement Web JPost.com JPost sites: The Jerusalem Report Green Israel Jpost Edition Francaise Christian World America's Voices Our Magazines Jerusalem Post Lite Sites Of Interest: Car Rental Israel Jpost Store Israel Hotels KKL-JNF Learn hebrew Poalim Online Web Hosting Providers BreitBart.com Fundraising Ideas Prom dresses & gowns Prom dresses Israel travel Israel tours Jerusalem Hotels Our Friends Services: JPost Toolbar JPost News Ticker JPost RSS feeds JPost Archives JP Subscriptions JPostPedia Learn English JPost Guides: Israel Guide Tour Guides Israel Attractions Information: About Us Feedback Staff E-mails Privacy Statement Copyright Sitemap Terms of Use News Partners Media Kit Advertise with Us Work for us About Us | Advertise with Us | Subscribe | Contact Us | RSS © The Jerusalem Post 1995 - 2010 JPost Newsletter is Powered by Pulseem






