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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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18 May 2010
By Stephen Lendman
On
April 23, Arizona's racist immigration bill became
law. Called "Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe
Neighborhood Act," it requires proof of legal entry or
citizenship or face arrest, fines, jailing, and/or
deportation.
Under South African apartheid, pass laws segregated
blacks from whites, restricted their movements,
required pass books be carried at all times, and
produced on demand or face arrest and prosecution.
Evolving from the 18th and 19th century until their
1986 repeal, they restricted entry to cities, forcibly
relocated blacks, denied them most public amenities
and many forms of employment, and became apartheid's
most hated symbol.
Under Israeli military occupation, repression is worse
than South Africa's. It's a sophisticated form of
social, economic, political and racial discrimination,
strangulation, and genocide, incorporating the worst
elements of colonialism and apartheid as well as
repressive dispossession, displacement and state
terrorism to separate Palestinians from their land and
heritage, deny them their rightful civil and human
rights, and gradually remove or eliminate them
altogether.
Apartheid is the worst form of racism. Israeli
militarized occupation is the worst form of apartheid,
incorporating violence, military incursions, land
theft, home demolitions, targeted assassinations,
murder, mass arrests, torture, destruction of
agricultural land, and isolation - measures amounting
to genocide, including starving Gazans under siege.
The
ID/permit system is one of many elements designed to
make greater Israel an ethnically pure Jewish state.
Israel requires all permanent residents and citizens
over 16 to have color-coded ID cards (called te'udat
zehut) for West Bank and Gazan Palestinians, East
Jerusalem ones, Israeli Arabs and Jews.
For
Palestinians, they dictate where they may live, work,
and move, or be allowed through West Bank checkpoints,
to Israel or Gaza. Doing so requires hard to get
permits, easily cancelled without notice. More on them
below.
Jews
have blue IDs, Palestinians either Israeli-issued
orange ones (in Hebrew) or nearly identical
Palestinian Authority-issued green ones with a PA seal
on top, that include the following information:
--
name and ID number;
--
father and mother's names;
--
date and place of birth;
--
religion;
--
marital status;
--
gender; and
--
photo.
Prior to 2005, ethnicity was also included. It's still
available on request from state registrations.
A
separate document includes:
--
current and previous addresses;
--
previous names;
--
citizenship, including for permanent resident citizens
of other countries;
--
name, birth date and ID numbers for spouse and
children; and
--
electoral polling stamp.
Since the 1993 Oslo Accords and follow-up agreements,
West Bank Palestinians are prohibited from accessing
Jerusalem health and educational services, the
Separation Wall adding more impediments for thousands
of residents on the West Bank side and others in the
Seam Zone - the area east of the Green Line and west
of the Wall. They also lose services, and for
Jerusalem residents, access to the city and their
residency.
Worse still, Seam Zone residents face possible land
annexation to make way for settlement expansions and
new ones. They need permits to live in their homes and
till their fields. Others in East Jerusalem living
west of the Wall must cross barriers and have permits
to access other parts of the West Bank.
In
theory, Jerusalem Palestinians may move freely within
the city and through most of the West Bank. In
practice, harsh security measures prevent it as well
as their right to work in Israel, pay taxes, and get
national insurance benefits. In addition, their
Jerusalem residency isn't guaranteed. If they live
outside the city for seven years, it's revoked, or if
Israel wishes, revocation by military order may come.
Israeli Arabs are citizens, their ID cards identifying
their religion. Again theoretically, they have free
access to the West Bank and Jerusalem. In practice,
they're stopped, questioned, delayed, and denied
access to West Bank cities by military order. The
Separation Wall adds other restrictions.
Israeli and settlement Jews have unrestricted free
movement throughout the West Bank and Jerusalem,
unimpeded by the Separation Wall or repressive
military orders, not applicable to them under civil
law.
Israel's Permit
System
They
harass and obstruct free movement as a Kafkaesque
element of control, including:
--
bypass roads for Jews only;
--
permanent and mobile checkpoints, roadblocks, and
other barriers that remain open or close
intermittently without notice or explanation;
--
control of all border crossings;
--
curfews;
--
closures anywhere, any time for any reason;
--
the Separation Wall expropriating 12% of the West Bank
as well as isolating communities from each other;
--
ghettoizing them; and
--
requiring a discriminatory system of work, internal
and external movement permits to go anywhere -
--
from one community to another;
--
to and from the West Bank and Jerusalem;
--
to reach Gaza, nearly impossible under siege;
--
to enter or leave Israel, also nearly impossible; and
--
go to work, school or shop, access health care, visit
family, and for Seam Zone farmers till land they've
owned for generations - what they face losing to make
way for settlement development.
Permits are also required to build; make home
renovations; grow crops not competing with Israeli
ones; open a factory or business; import equipment;
export merchandise; and over whatever else Israel
decides to control - imposed to make daily life
impossible.
Violence and bureaucratic harshness enforce the
occupation, ongoing illegally since 1967 - to
traumatize and intimidate Palestinians to leave, crush
their will, and displace them forcefully if necessary
for Jewish only settlements.
West
Bank Palestinians face daunting restrictions to reach
Jerusalem or Israel, given repressive prohibitions,
except under special circumstances rarely granted. To
qualify requires applying and paying for a magnetic
card, proving they have security clearance permission.
If granted, they're for short periods for medical or
other emergencies. Few permits are issued for work,
and most medical and other emergency ones are denied.
Despite living on their own land in their own country,
under military occupation they're designated
"permanent residents," the equivalent of being
non-persons.
Traveling abroad requires a special Interior Ministry
issued, "laissez passer," good for one year and
renewable (only in Israel) if granted, but unless
return before expiration, it's denied altogether.
To
reach Jordan, a valid state passport is needed,
documents held by many West Bank and East Jerusalem
residents since the Hashemite Kingdom administered the
Territory.
Since the 1994 Cairo Agreement on Gaza and the Jericho
Area, special permits aren't required, just a passport
and valid PA travel document approved by Israel. But
given intensified repression since September 2000 and
the Gaza War, procedures are easily denied, Israel
maintaining tight internal and border control for
"security."
Until the second Intifada, West Bank residents could
travel from Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport with an
"airport permit." Now they're for special emergencies
only on humanitarian grounds. Nonetheless, West Bank
residents outside the Territory can't return easily.
Since 1994, reentry permits aren't needed for those
temporarily abroad or in Jordan. But if left before
1994, returning may be denied if permits expired and
weren't renewed, possible only in Israel. From 1967 -
1994, triennial renewals were required.
Again, established procedures change often and are
uncertain at best - to harass, deny and repress.
Under siege, Gazans are entirely constrained (with few
exceptions), but earlier, with ID and magnetic cards
and and a required permit, travel to Jordan or abroad
via Ben Gurion Airport was permitted.
No
longer. Israel controls the only Rafah crossing into
Egypt, so to enter requires a hard to get Egyptian
visa and Israel's permission, available only under
special circumstances to very few people with no
assurance of reentry on return even though permits
aren't required.
Under the Oslo Accords and follow-up agreements,
Israel and the PA maintained a registry of West Bank
and Gaza residents, the PA authorized to issue ID
cards and passports (for travel) to West Bank
Palestinians, not Gazans or those in East Jerusalem.
Since September 2000, Israel's Civil Administration
Liaison Office handles all permit applications, none
of them easy to get.
Unlike earlier, permission to work in Israel is hard
to impossible as an October 7, 2003 Haaretz article
explained, saying:
"It
is quite complicated for a Palestinian to get legal
permission to work in Israel. The employer must apply
to the authorities, providing the name of the worker
to be employed. The security services check the
worker's history - and there are criteria that anyway
must be met: they must be over 35, have at least five
children; and no security history, which means never
having been arrested and preferably none of his
relatives having such a record. If the license is
granted, it goes to the Palestinian Authority Labor
Affairs Ministry offices in the district where the
worker lives, and the PA Employment Bureau hands over
the license...."
Final Comments
About 2,500 military orders govern Palestinians,
covering virtually everything from bank account
withdrawals, to water rights, land transactions,
opening a business, growing onions, to Order No. 1650
(Prevention of Infiltration) and Order No. 1649
(Security Provisions).
Effective April 13, they potentially facilitate the
deportation of tens of thousands of West Bank and East
Jerusalem Palestinians and/or their imprisonment for
up to seven years.
Those at risk have ID cards showing Gaza their birth
place, others born in the West Bank or abroad who lost
their residency status, anyone unable to prove their
legitimate status, foreign-born spouses, and those
Israel targets for any reason to expel them. Earlier,
Israeli civil courts prevented deportations. Military
ones now have sole jurisdiction.
Anyone in the West Bank or East Jerusalem "illegally"
is an "infiltrator," as well as others there without
lawful permits. Military commanders have sole
discretion to incrementally or mass expel them, with
no way to challenge as orders will come unexpectedly,
providing no time to appeal. Deportations and/or
arrests will follow, longstanding practices under
repressive military occupation affording justice
solely to Jews.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site
at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio
Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are
archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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