Los Angeles Times

Israel’s new rules for foreigners who visit the West Bank

- By Josef Federman Federman writes for the Associated Press.

JERUSALEM — An Israeli military body on Sunday released a list of rules and restrictio­ns for foreigners wanting to enter Palestinia­n areas of the West Bank, extending its control of daily life and movement in and out of the occupied territory.

COGAT, the Israeli body in charge of Palestinia­n civilian affairs, stepped back from a number of controvers­ial restrictio­ns that had appeared in a draft of the rules published earlier this year, such as a requiremen­t that people who form romantic relationsh­ips with local Palestinia­ns register with Israeli authoritie­s.

But many of the changes in the 90-page document appeared to be largely cosmetic. The U.S. ambassador expressed concern over the rules, and critics said they merely entrenched Israel’s control over the Palestinia­n population in the territory.

“The Israeli military is proposing new restrictio­ns in order to isolate Palestinia­n society from the outside world and keep Palestinia­n families from living together,” said Jessica Montell, executive director of HaMoked, an Israeli human rights group that has challenged the rules in court.

“In response to criticism, they have removed the most outrageous elements. Yet they are keeping the basic structure of this very invasive and harmful procedure in place,” she added. The rules are set to go into effect Oct. 20.

The wide-ranging policy imposes rules on foreigners who marry Palestinia­ns or who come to the West Bank to work, volunteer, study or teach. The rules do not apply to people visiting Israel or the more than 130 Jewish settlement­s scattered across the West Bank.

Israel captured the West Bank, along with East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Middle East War — territorie­s Palestinia­ns seek for an independen­t state.

The initial draft included a requiremen­t that a foreigner who forms a serious romantic relationsh­ip with a local Palestinia­n notify the Israeli military within 30 days of the “start of the relationsh­ip,” defined as an engagement, wedding or moving in together.

The 30-day notice was removed in the new rules, but they say that if a foreigner starts a relationsh­ip with a Palestinia­n, “the appointed COGAT official must be informed as part of their request to renew or extend the existing visa.”

The new rules also dropped earlier limits on the number of foreign students and teachers allowed to study or work in the West Bank and extended the length of time they can stay.

Yet COGAT continues to hold great discretion over who is allowed in. It must approve the academic credential­s of a university lecturer invited by a Palestinia­n institutio­n, and holds the right to screen potential students if there is “suspicion of misuse” of a visa.

Tough restrictio­ns on foreign spouses of Palestinia­ns also remain in place. Spouses are entitled only to short-term visits and can be required to deposit up to 70,000 shekels (about $20,000) to guarantee that they will leave the territory.

The new rules offer some potential relief for foreign spouses, including a longerterm visa of 27 months that can be renewed and includes multiple trips in and out. They also drop a “cooling off” period that required spouses to leave for lengthy periods between visas.

But these new and improved visas require an applicatio­n through the Palestinia­n Authority to Israel — a process that is uncertain and notoriousl­y opaque, Montell said. The document says a final decision is also subject to approval by Israel’s “political echelon.”

U.S. Ambassador Thomas Nides expressed disappoint­ment with the rules, and said he had “aggressive­ly engaged” with Israel on the draft and would continue to do so ahead of the rules’ formal implementa­tion.

“I continue to have concerns with the published protocols, particular­ly regarding COGAT’s role in determinin­g whether individual­s invited by Palestinia­n academic institutio­ns are qualified to enter the West Bank, and the potential negative impact on family unity,” he said. “I fully expect the government of Israel to make necessary adjustment­s” during a two-year pilot program to ensure “fair and equal treatment of all U.S. citizens and other foreign nationals traveling to the West Bank.”

Israel hopes to reach a visa-waiver program with the United States, which has long resisted the move in part because Israel treats Palestinia­n Americans differentl­y from other U.S. citizens.

The European Union, which sends hundreds of students and professors on academic exchanges to the West Bank each year, did not immediatel­y comment on the Israeli announceme­nt.

COGAT officials declined to comment further; the Palestinia­n Authority had no immediate reaction. Montell said her group would continue its legal challenges.

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