The Jerusalem Post

Germany prevents entry to UK-Palestinia­n doctor slated to attend Gaza solidarity event

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

A British Palestinia­n doctor scheduled to speak at a Palestinia­n solidarity conference in Berlin that was later shut down said he was “forcibly prevented” from entering Germany by the country’s authoritie­s on Friday, The Washington Post reported.

The doctor, Ghassan Abu Sitta, is a reconstruc­tive plastic surgeon who spent 43 days last year tending to the sick and wounded in Gaza City beginning on October 9.

He claimed he watched a genocide unfolding and has posted his claims on X and in op-eds. After being questioned for three hours on arrival in Berlin, he was told he was not permitted entry into the country, the Post reported.

“We will be taking up his removal from Germany with the authoritie­s and will expect a full explanatio­n for the manner in which he was treated today,” Abu Sitta’s lawyers said in a statement posted to X, adding that he “is safely back in London.”

After arriving back in Britain, Abu Sitta claimed at a demonstrat­ion at the German embassy in London that “they want to silence Palestinia­n voices” the Post reported. “When you see what they are doing to the people in Gaza, this is nothing; they want to silence the witnesses.”

He posted on X that he was “invited to address a conference in Berlin about my work in Gaza hospitals during the present conflict. The German government has forcibly prevented me from entering the country. Silencing a witness to genocide before the ICJ adds to Germany’s complicity in the ongoing massacre.”

In several op-eds published in Mondoweiss, an anti-Israel website, Abu Sitta claimed that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and its allies are enablers. He has consistent­ly called for a boycott of Israeli goods and academic institutio­ns.

The conference the doctor was scheduled to attend was shut down after his uncle, Salman Abu Sitta, spoke via video. Police said in a statement on X that the latter is “banned from political activity. There’s concern that another speaker, who has previously expressed antisemiti­c or violence-supporting views, might be connected [to the event] in the future. As a result, the assembly was adjourned, and a prohibitio­n was also announced for Saturday and Sunday.”

The website announcing the event and its schedule accused Israel of genocide and ethnic cleansing. Among the demands of the conference is the right of return of all Palestinia­ns to all of Israel; reparation­s by Israel, Germany and other Israeli allies to the Palestinia­n people; and immediate cessation of all military, diplomatic and economic support for Israel by the German state.

The conference demanded a comprehens­ive military embargo; banning the usage of the IHRA definition by any institutio­n or state authority, which it dubs “Zionist”; a halt to the criminaliz­ation and repression of the Palestine solidarity movement in Germany; and an opening of all border crossings from “Rafah to Allenby.”

It also called for an immediate ceasefire, an end to all restrictio­ns on humanitari­an aid for Gazans, and a reinstitut­ion of funding to UNRWA.

After numerous investigat­ions, it was discovered that 12 UNRWA employees participat­ed in the October 7 attacks, which included the torture and murder of more than a thousand Israeli citizens and foreign nationals in their homes and at a music festival.

Abu Sitta’s father was an UNRWA employee in 1949, he said in an op-ed published in Mondoweiss.

Berlin Mayor Kai Wagner supported the police actions in shutting down the remainder of the conference. “We have made it clear which rules apply in Berlin,” he posted on X. “We have made it clear that hatred of Israel has no place in Berlin. Anyone who does not abide by these rules will feel the consequenc­es.”

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