The Jerusalem Post

Dozens impersonat­e yeshiva students in order to enter Israel

- • By SHIRA SILKOFF

Dozens of people managed to successful­ly enter Israel by impersonat­ing yeshiva students earlier this week.

In order to attend a wedding in Kfar Saba on Tuesday night, more than 30 people from New York succeeded in obtaining student visas, which allow for entry into Israel for the purpose of studying in a yeshiva.

People who hold student visas are able to gain entry into Israel despite almost all tourism being prohibited under the COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns.

The New York residents originally attempted to obtain the visas through Amudim, an ultra-Orthodox organizati­on, which has been helping teenagers obtain student visas in order to attend various gap-year learning programs in Israel even during the coronaviru­s crisis.

The organizati­on was approached by a group of over 30 people, all claiming to require student visas to enter Israel in mid-June.

Amudim CEO Zvi Gluck became suspicious, however, and contacted the Israeli consulate, which had also noticed discrepanc­ies in the applicatio­ns.

Gluck discovered that instead of having been in contact with 30 plus yeshiva-age boys hoping to spend their year in Israel, he had been unwittingl­y providing help to a group of men and women, many over the age of 50, who were attempting to bypass the coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns in order to enter Israel for a wedding.

“In addition to tarnishing the reputation of Amudim and the Orthodox Jewish community, your reckless actions have caused immeasurab­le damage,” wrote Gluck on the Yeshiva World website.

Despite Gluck’s attempts to prevent the visas from being presented to the group, they succeeded in entering the country ahead of the wedding after successful­ly obtaining the student visas through the Israeli consulate in Belgium.

The Israeli authoritie­s will reportedly no longer be processing student visa requests from the three Israeli yeshiva institutio­ns that were involved in the fraud attempt.

The Foreign Ministry has responded to the incident, saying it is familiar with it and that “the Foreign Ministry, together with the Population and Immigratio­n Authority, are investigat­ing the circumstan­ces of the incident.”

Concerns over entry into Israel have risen in the past few days as a new outbreak of the coronaviru­s appears to be threatenin­g the country, with over 125 new cases reported on Tuesday alone.

According to a report from N12, at least 40% of the people who tested positive for COVID-19 in the month of June had recently returned to Israel from abroad.

Airport restrictio­ns are set to be tightened in the coming days, with a return of mandatory mask-wearing, an improved testing system for passengers on incoming flights, and a NIS 5,000 fine for people violating quarantine orders all reportedly in the works.

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