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The Israeli army says it will forbid entry
foreign visitors access to all of the the occupied territories in the
West Bank, according to a June 22nd article in the Israeli newspaper
Ma’ariv.
Although the apparent goal for this seemingly impossible task is to keep
international visitors from entering the occupied territories in support
of Palestinian non-violent resistance, if it is implimented it could
also stop tourists and religious pilgrims from visiting Biblical sites.
“The [Israeli] army will issue a decree
forbidding the entry of foreign citizens into Judea and Samaria” reads a
Hebrew-only print article in Ma’ariv published on June 22nd 2006. “Judea
and Samaria” is Biblical terminology for the occupied Palestinian
territories in the West Bank. Tourists including Christian pilgrims may
find themselves banned from many important holy, Biblical and tourist
sites, such as the Christian communities in Bethlehem, Aboud and
Jericho, and the Samaritan community near Nablus. In Aboud, the shrine
of St. Barbara is threatened by Israel’s wall.
According to the article, the purpose of
the ban is to “prevent the ‘Summer of Peace’ [Freedom Summer] event
which is planned by the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), a
pro-Palestinian organization which is active in the territories on
behalf of the Palestinian population”. Through Freedom Summer,
Palestinians in communities throughout the occupied territories invite
internationals and Israelis to participate in non-violent demonstrations
and direct actions against the annexation of Palestinian land.
A similar ban has been in effect in the
Gaza strip since April 2003. Very few foreign visitors have been allowed
to visit Gaza. Certain journalists and workers for select international
organisations have been granted time-limited permits by Israel, but even
these are not easy to obtain. This ban has remained in effect after
Israel’s unilateral "disengagement" from the Gaza strip. Only
Palestinians with Israeli-issued ID cards are permitted to access
through the Rafah crossing, even though it was supposedly transferred to
Palestinian control with European observers. All other entry and exit
points to the Gaza strip remain under Israeli control.
The announcement of this ban comes at a
time when foreign aid workers and foreign nationals of Palestinian
origin and their families are experiencing increased Israeli
restrictions on their right to reside in the Occupied Palestinian
Territories. A number of individuals residing for long periods in the
Occupied Territories for work or family reasons who had been renewing
three month Israeli visas by periodically leaving the country and
returning, were recently denied entry by Israeli authorities or told
they will not be allowed to return.
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