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Knesset votes to re-extend emergency provision on Family Unification Law

18:00 Jun 13 2016 Israeli Knesset

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BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) -- The Israeli Knesset voted-- 65 in favor, 14 against-- Monday evening to extend Israel’s “Citizenship and Entry into Israel” law, according to Reut Mor, press secretary for the head of the Joint List Ayman Odeh.

The emergency provision to Israel’s Family Reunification Law, which grants automatic legal status to non-Israelis who marry Israeli citizens or residents, was first enacted in 2002 during the political upheavals of the second Palestinian intifada, and was adopted into Israeli law in 2003.

The Citizenship and Entry into Israel law, as the provision is called, prohibits Palestinians from the occupied West Bank and the besieged Gaza Strip from automatically obtaining legal status in Israel or East Jerusalem through family unions.

The law prevents the granting of Israeli citizenship or residency permits to Palestinians who marry Israeli citizens or residents, including prohibiting Israeli citizens or residents from passing on their legal status to their children if married to someone from the occupied Palestinian territory.

The law also applies to foreign nationals from Iran, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Libya, Sudan, Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, and can apply to other nationalities originating from countries the Israeli government deems a security threat.

However, the law has primarily affected Palestinian citizens of Israel, making up 20 percent of the Israeli population, who commonly marry Palestinians from the occupied West Bank.

The Israeli government purported at the time of its introduction that the temporary measure would prevent “terrorists” from entering Israel through processes of family reunification.

A Knesset meeting was held on June 1 where a joint committee recommended extending the provision for the 13th year, as a Shin Bet internal security representative informed Knesset members that families coming into Israel for family reunification were “playing an increasing role in terrorism.”

According to a press release from the Israeli Knesset, the Shin Bet official said that “those seeking reunification with family members in Israel pose a security risk due to the possibility that they will be used to carry out terror attacks or engage in espionage.”

The official added that 104 of these individuals brought into Israel under the law committed terrorist attacks between 2001 to 2016, stating that 17 of the 104 had come to Israel after marrying an Israeli citizen, while 87 were granted citizenship through relatives who married Israeli citizens.

The Shin Bet official also said that “73% of terrorists with Israeli citizenship who had committed acts of terror against Israelis since the beginning of the terror wave last September were brought in as part of family reunifications.”

Member of the Joint List Ahmad Tibi slammed the official’s case findings, stating that Shin Bet did not include even a single case of security offenses committed by rejected applicants for family reunification into the study.

“This proves that the law is not based on any security-related concern. It is only implemented because [Shin Bet] views a love story of a Palestinian couple as a plot against state security,” Tibi added.

Osama Saadia, another Joint List member, also countered claims made by the Shin Bet official, saying that “29 of the 30 people involved in terror had obtained their status as a result of the law to annex Jerusalem, and not through family reunification,” the Israeli news agency Haaretz reported.

Although the Israeli Supreme Court prevented the provision from being introduced as permanent legislation, the Israeli government has renewed the temporary security measure every year since 2004.

The law was revised in 2005 to allow for Israel’s interior minister to grant exemptions under the law for Palestinian women older than 25 and older than 35 for men from the West Bank to obtain temporary permits to reside in Israel. However, the permits would not provide married civil status or any social security rights, according to Israeli human rights group Hamoked.

The human rights group is one of many that have condemned the law, calling it a “racist” provision that discriminates on ethnic origin.

“It also authorizes collective punishment by stipulating that applications may be denied if it is claimed that the non-Israeli applicant or anyone from her/his extended family might be considered a security risk,” Hamoked stated in a past report.

Human Rights Watch noted in 2012 the stark imbalances inherent in Israel’s national immigration policies when applied to Palestinian citizens of Israel and when applied to Jewish citizens.

In addition to the Israeli government automatically granting non-Jewish foreign nationals Israeli residency or citizenship over four-year periods if married to a Jewish citizen of Israel, any Jewish person is granted automatic citizenship in Israel regardless of marital status under Israel’s 1950 Law of Return, the rights group highlighted.

The provision has also been strongly denounced by left-wing Israeli government officials, who see the law as a discriminatory act against Palestinian citizens of Israel who are much more likely to marry a Palestinian from the occupied Palestinian territory.
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