Arab News

Israeli govt dealt blow in citizenshi­p vote

- Daoud Kuttab Amman

Israel’s Knesset early on Tuesday failed to renew a temporary law that bars Arab citizens from extending citizenshi­p or residency rights to spouses from the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

The 59-59 vote in parliament marked a major setback for Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.

The Citizenshi­p and Entry into Israel Law was enacted as a temporary measure in 2003, at the height of the second Intifada. Bennett had hoped to find a compromise between hard-line and moderate factions within his coalition. But he suffered a stinging defeat in a vote he reportedly described as “a referendum on the new government.”

The law is now set to expire at midnight on Tuesday.

However, experts warm that Israeli security officials will find new ways of keeping Palestinia­ns from obtaining residency or citizenshi­p through marriage.

Jafar Farah, head of the Mossawa Center in Haifa, told Arab News that the defeat of the law came as a result of “advocacy, protests by families and hard work by many.”

Farah said: “We and the affected families organized dozens of meetings with parliament­arians, the media and other groups to explain the difficulti­es that married families have to go through to be together.”

He called on parliament­arians to “continue the struggle” until an appropriat­e family reunificat­ion law is enacted.

“The Israeli policy allows any Jew in the world to get permanent citizenshi­p once they arrive at the airport, while at the same time, it perpetuate­s the division of Palestinia­n families using security and demographi­cs excuses,” Farah said.

Um Yasmin, a Palestinia­n mother from Jerusalem who married a Palestinia­n from Bethlehem, told Arab News that she hopes that the absence of the law will help her family lead a normal life.

“We have been forced to have two homes in order not to lose our right to live in Jerusalem,” she said.

Wadie Abu Nassar, director of the Haifa-based Internatio­nal Center for Consultati­ons, told Arab News that the failure of the coalition in the Knesset indicates a growing leadership crisis in Israel.

“Naftali Bennett and Mansour

Abbas (leader of the United Arab List) showed that they are unable to control their own parties and mind the gaps among the components of the coalition, which they created just a few weeks ago,” he said.

But Abu Nassar added that he was unsure whether the absence of this law will affect separated families. “While 1,600 Palestinia­n families, who were supposed to get some quick easing in the process of unificatio­n — as part of the deal between Israel’s interior minister and Mansour Abbas — will not get immediate relief, Israel’s secret service would have to work a lot to examine case by case instead of hiding behind the law for declining requests for family unificatio­ns,” he said.

Jessica Montell, director of

HaMoked, an Israeli human rights organizati­on based in Jerusalem, told Arab News that the majority of those affected by the law are Palestinia­n residents of Jerusalem.

“About 70 percent of the persons affected by this law are residents of East Jerusalem and not Israeli citizens. In fact, the law disproport­ionately harms the weakest population: Women from poor families with few tools to navigate this hostile bureaucrac­y,” she said.

Shawan Jabarin, director of Al-Haq Human rights organizati­on, told Arab News that the law has always had racist underpinni­ngs.

He said: “Israel’s racist policies are being exposed bit by bit. This was a political law that was hiding behind security cover. Palestinia­n families have suffered for 18 years. Isn’t that enough?”

The Knesset enacted the law in July 2003. It forbids Israelis married to, or who will marry in the future, residents of the occupied territorie­s from living in Israel with their spouses. Israelis married to foreign nationals who are not residents of the occupied territorie­s are still allowed to submit requests for family unificatio­n on their behalf.

Experts warn that Israeli security officials will find new ways of keeping Palestinia­ns from obtaining residency or citizenshi­p through marriage.

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