American editor at Ma'an News Agency denied re-entry into Israel + held for deportation hearing

Jared Malsin, the editor of the English-language website of the Bethlehem-based Ma’an News Agency, was detained upon arrival at Israel’s Ben Gurion International Airport when arriving from a trip abroad.

Jared Malsin is at right in this Ma’an photo, holding the small recording device.  He is listening to Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad.  Ma’an’s Chief Editor, Nasser Lahham, is wearing the red tie and standing to the Prime Minister’s right in the photo.

Jared Malsin in right of photo speaks to PA Prime Minister Salaam Fayyad

Jared is also a friend and colleague who edited some of my contributions donated to Ma’an News Agency.  Recently, we both found ourselves in the same Arabic-language class (Media Arabic) in Jerusalem for the last three months of 2009. [He apparently did not previously study Arabic at Bir Zeit University in Ramallah.]

Jared Malsin, an American from New England, [Josh, in a comment posted below, informs me that “He’s actually from New Hampshire, not Vermont”], has a Jewish father [Jared’s colleage from Ma’an tells me that his mother is not Jewish, which is a crucial point in Jewish religious law — but having a Jewish father still makes him eligible for Israeli citizenship, should he choose to exercise this right].

UPDATED FRIDAY: Ma’an News Agency reported that “More than 48 hours after he was first detained, Malsin is still being denied access to any of his belongings. He was not been given a change of clothes, toiletries, or offered the chance to shower.  ‘I have nothing’, he said during a visit to his detention cell by a US consular official on Thursday afternoon.  ‘I don’t even have a pen or paper, not even a book’.”  This was sent out as a Ma’an press release.

Ma’an News Agency has reported this morning that “Malsin was detained at Israel’s Ben Gurion International Airport on Tuesday afternoon while returning from the Czech Republic on holiday. After eight hours of interrogation, the Israeli Interior Ministry ordered him held and scheduled deportation for 6am on Thursday. Ma’an attorney Castro Daoud intervened amid pressure from US diplomats seeking an injunction against the deportation. The request was rejected by the Israeli attorney general, whose own ruling was then overturned by a Tel Aviv judge … Judge Miriam Sokolov will hear Malsin’s case at 10am at the Tel Aviv District Court. A verdict is expected by noon. Hebrew-language interrogation transcripts obtained by Ma’an reveal that Malsin was deemed a security risk on the apparent basis of his political beliefs. Interrogators gathered online research into the journalist’s writing history, which the transcripts indicate included news stories ‘criticizing the State of Israel‘, among other allegations that he ‘authored articles inside the territories‘. The security agents questioned why Malsin would have entered the West Bank if he were truly interested in becoming an Israeli citizen [sic], say he ‘claimed to be Jewish’, and allege that ‘he exploited his Jewishness to gain entry into the State of Israel’. Among the specific grounds for detaining him were ‘lying to border officials’, ‘here illegally’, and ‘entered Israel by means of lies’.” Ma’an also reported that “Israeli officials have refused to publicly acknowledge Malsin’s presence at the airport or anywhere else”.  This report can be read in full here.

The Jerusalem Post has reported that “An American Jewish journalist who works as a senior English-language editor at the Ma’an Palestinian news agency was denied entry into Israel on Tuesday and is scheduled to be deported on Thursday. Security sources told The Jerusalem Post that ‘suspicious signs’ were identified on Jared Malsin, adding that the suspicions were passed on to the Interior Ministry. The sources said ‘no security advice’ was given to the Interior Ministry regarding Malsin. The Interior Ministry then took the decision to deny Malsin entry into Israel. The ministry was not immediately available for comment. Malsin was detained after he deplaned from a flight from Prague with his girlfriend, Faith Rowold, on Tuesday afternoon. It was not immediately clear whether Rowold, a US national who works as a volunteer for the Lutheran Church in Jerusalem, was also denied entry. ‘He was really confused’, said George Hale, a colleague of Malsin who spoke to him by phone before Malsin’s phone was confiscated on Tuesday night. ‘They interrogated him about pro-Palestinian activities and asked if he was involved in such things’, Hale added. ‘We are not activists in any way. That would reflect poorly on our impartiality. He is not known for being an activist. If he’s at a protest, it’s with a camera’, Hale said. In a statement released by Ma’an, the news organization said it ‘scrupulously maintains its editorial independence and aims to promote access to information, freedom of expression, press freedom, and media pluralism in Palestine’ …”. This JPost article is posted here.

  • If Ben Gurion Airport security gave “no security advice” to the Interior Ministry [and if Jared were a security threat, the Ben Gurion Airport security would surely have had to say so], why did the Interior Ministry decide to deny him entry?

UPDATE: Colleagues at Ma’an have just said that Jared’s deportation hearing has been postponed until Sunday, and he remains in Israeli detention.  The conditions in these detention facilities are known to be rather bad — and this delay means Jared will have spent  more than four days in them before his hearing.  His girfriend, Faith Rowold, was deported today (Thursday).   According to a source in the Lutheran Church in Jerusalem, she was in Jerusalem for at least a year on a one-year church volunteer visa,  and had left the country (and was trying to return on Tuesday) in order to obtain a valid new visa.  (Other American-national church volunteers in Jerusalem who have had the special one-year visas for this category have reported to this correspondent earlier that their requests for visa extensions were denied this year.)  Faith Rowold went back to Czeckoslovakia, and may try to see if she can resolve the problem from there, the source said.  The source added that U.S. Embassy and Consular officials were “heavily involved” in trying to resolve both cases…

UPDATE TWO: Ma’an has a more detailed account published as a press release on their website here.  It reports that “Interrogation transcripts reveal that Malsin’s detention was linked to his work as a professional journalist. Airport officials indicated that he was denied entry into the country for ‘failing to cooperate’ with Israeli security personnel, and because he had authored news stories ‘inside the territories’ and articles ‘criticizing the State of Israel’. The documents question his Jewish heritage, as well … US Embassy staff have registered objections with the Israeli authorities over Malsin’s treatment. Dutch officials, whose government provided some of Ma’an’s initial funding in 2005, expressed concern and are monitoring the situation. Danish representatives, who also provided start-up funding for Ma’an were also contacted.  Nevertheless, foreign diplomats say there is little they can do in cases where Israel cites ‘security reasons’ for denying a foreign-passport holder’s entry, although Israel has yet to specify any allegations in Malsin’s case. Israeli security officials, meanwhile, have quietly expressed concern to Ma’an over this latest abuse of power by the Interior Ministry”.

The question of donor funding what is supposed to be an independent news agency — something which is peculiar to the Palestinian Authority area — is highlighted in an “Order of Events” that Ma’an compiled on this same page that “Jared’s phone was confiscated by El Al security officials when he boarded a flight in the Czech Republic on 12 January 2010. He was denied the opportunity to make any calls to his consulate, his family or a lawyer between 11am (upon boarding) and 11pm (when his mobile was briefly returned) … [H]is long-term girlfriend, Faith Rowold, a two-year, registered volunteer with the Lutheran Church in Jerusalem, was also seized and placed in a holding cell pending deportation. At 4pm when the flight was disembarked in Tel Aviv, Faith used the phone of a fellow traveler, an Israeli national, in the restroom of the airport. She called her sister with a brief message saying she had landed but indicated that there were problems. At 6:30pm, the office of US Citizen Services was contacted in Jerusalem. Officials called Israeli airport authorities, who assured them that there were no American citizens being held there at that time. The names of Jared and his companion, also a US national, were reportedly not flagged. The official suggested the couple were out having a good time in Tel Aviv and had simply not gotten in touch … Jared used the mobile of a French traveler admitted to the detention hall at 8:30pm to call his Faith’s sister again and asked a colleague to immediately contact the US Embassy. He said he was being questioned and feared being denied entry into Israel; he provided passport numbers for himself and his fellow traveler. The US Consulate official was contacted again with the information that Jared was not out in Tel Aviv, but had in fact been in Israeli custody since 11am that morning. The official immediately expressed concern and said he would call his contacts again at the airport. The official called back at after 9pm and asked for more information on Jared and his fellow traveler: are they married, is she pregnant, is there a Palestinian connection, what newspaper does Jared write for, etc.  The consulate official was informed that Jared worked with Ma’an.  He was also informed that while the US, EU and UK fund programs and productions with the Ma’an Network, that staff at each of the consulates consult the English Desk site daily, even hourly, the State of Israel does not recognize Ma’an as a news organization, and therefore denies its journalists press accreditation.  By 11pm, both Jared and Faith were informed that they had been denied entry. Their mobile phones were returned to them for two hours, and then confiscated just after midnight when they were transferred to holding cells”…

UPDATE THREE: The BBC website has reported that “[Israeli] Interior Ministry spokeswoman Sabin Hadad said Mr Malsin had been denied entry because he had refused to answer during questioning. She said issues related to Mr Malsin’s visa ‘could have been solved if he had co-operated’, said Ms Hadad. An official report on the questioning, which Maan said it had received from the court, accused Mr Malsin of failing to arrange the correct visa, but did not give details. It said he was suspected of ‘exploiting the fact that he is Jewish to gain a visa’. This was apparently on the basis that, when seeking a visa extension previously, he had told Interior Ministry officials he was exploring the option of emigrating to Israel, but had written articles critical of the country. By law Jews from around the world are eligible to emigrate to Israel. The report also said Mr Malsin had refused to give the name of the friend he said he lived with in the West Bank … Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said that allegations that the decision was because of Mr Malsin’s journalism were ‘simply absurd’.” This same BBC report quoted Jared Malsin’s colleague at Ma’an, George Hale, as saying that ‘Malsin, a graduate of Yale University, had initially come to Israel on the Birthright programme, which funds visits to Israel for young Jewish Americans. Mr Malsin had never overstayed a visa, except for his most recent one, which was a few days overdue and that he had been told by officials this did not matter, Mr Hale said. Foreign nationals working or volunteering with Palestinian organisations in the West Bank often complain of difficulty obtaining visas. Many are present on three-month tourist visas, which do not provide permission to work and may not be extended”.  The BBC website report is published here.

  • So, as the BBC reported, “Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said that allegations that the decision was because of Mr Malsin’s journalism were ‘simply absurd’.” While these allegations may well be “simply absurd”, as Mark Regev said, it nonetheless appears that Israeli security officials at Ben Gurion Airport and the Israeli Ministry of the Interior have made and sustained them.  If so, why?  And why have other Israeli government officials not challenged them?

According to a link on the mondoweiss blog, Tel Aviv-based journalist Mya Guarnieri wrote on the Huffington Post today that “Although Bethlehem-based Maan is identified as a Palestinian news service, it is widely known as an independent media outlet — free of political agendas and noted for its unbiased reporting. As such, it is attracting a steadily growing readership, receiving over 3 million visitors a month. Malsin appealed the deportation order and was scheduled to stand before a judge in Tel Aviv on Thursday morning. But according to Maan’s lawyer, Castro Daoud, the hearing has been delayed until Sunday for unknown reasons. In the meantime, Daoud says, Malsin remains in the custody of Israeli authorities. Since his detainment, which Israeli officials initially denied, Malsin has had little contact with the outside world. Daoud has had only one brief meeting with his client and Malsin has made a short phone call to Maan staff writer and sub-editor, George Hale. Speaking to The Huffington Post, Hale reports that Malsin was shocked by the detainment. Malsin was also surprised that Israeli security officials were questioning him about the International Solidarity Movement, an activist group that Malsin has no affiliation with. ‘He [Malsin] is the last person who would be involved with the ISM. He is a journalist’, Hale says” Guarnieri added that “When considered within a larger context, Malsin’s detention seems to point to a government intent on silencing dissent”. This report is published on the Huffington Post here.

  • As we reported earlier this week here, Israeli forces conducted a 3am raid into the heart of downtown Ramallah to detain a young Czech woman [Eva Novakova] who has been in the area with the International Solidarity Movement, and for the previous three weeks working as the group’s media coordinator. She was taken from Ramallah into Israel, and deported from Ben Gurion airport at 6am on Tuesday.  Was it just a random coincidence that a few hours later Jared was detained while returning from a holiday that just happened to be in the Czech Republic?   It is interesting to read, in one of the Ma’an reports on Eva Novakova’s deportation, that “Dusan Kralik, the Embassy of the Czech Republic’s envoy to Israel, said he was not planning to protest the move, which Nováková’s supporters say was carried out without due process, bypassing Israel’s judiciary. ‘She was here illegally, without permission’, Kralik told Ma’an. ‘She’s supposed to leave’.”   This Ma’an report is posted here.  It is also interesting that one of the emails that Eva Novakova must have been responsible for sending out, as the ISM media coordinator for the three weeks prior to her seizure in Ramallah and deportation from Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport, is one dated 3 January, reporting on another deportation, of another American: “Minnesota resident Ryan Olander is facing deportation after being held in Israeli prisons for over two weeks. He spent his Christmas and New Year at a deportation facility in Ramle, where his request for release has been rejected by the prison judge. His lawyer submitted an appeal to the District Court in Tel Aviv on 27 December 2009 challenging the request of the Israeli Ministry of Interior for Mr. Olander’s deportation. The lawyer is anticipating the decision of the judge within the next 48 hours. Ryan Olander was arrested from a tent the Palestinian al-Kurd family built in their own backyard [in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem] following a recent setter take-over of a section of their house. He was drinking tea and talking to the family members when six Israeli police walked into the tent and took him for questioning at the Russian Compound police station in west Jerusalem (http://palsolidarity.org/2009/12/9944). Despite being released without charges the following day, Ryan was illegally re-arrested by immigration police only a few moments later, right outside of the same police station that told him he was free to go“.

UPDATE FOUR: Israel’s Haaretz newspaper finally published a brief story on Friday, saying that “Interior Ministry spokeswoman Sabine Hadad said: ‘Mr. Malsin is not staying in Israel on a journalist’s visa and the team that questioned him had no idea he was a journalist. He returned to Israel with his girlfriend. Both of them are registered … as having been here illegally several times’. Interrogation transcripts obtained by Maan indicate that Malsin may have been deemed a security risk due to stories he wrote criticizing Israel”. This Haaretz story is posted on their English-language website here.

  • [n.b. – What?  They were in Israel “illegally” several times?   How is that possible?]

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It’s hard to understand what the real issues are.  If the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) refuses to give press credentials to employees of the Ma’an News Agency, based in the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem, then Jared Malsin could not have asked for a journalist visa.  So, what kind of a visa should he have requested, exactly?

UPDATE FIVE – REALITY CHECK: My own journalist visa from the Israeli Ministry of Interior, issued on an annual basis, is about to expire, again. Its renewal depends entirely upon a recommendation from the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO), which is part of the Israeli Prime Minister’s office — and this recommendation is entirely based on the issuance of a valid GPO card. I have now received a letter in response to my application for renewal of my GPO card saying that (this year) I do not meet the requirements — and the first reason cited is that (1) my website DOES NOT HAVE at least 100,000 hits a day from at least 20,000 distinct IP Addresses. In addition, the GPO letter says that (2) it has not been proven to its satisfaction that I was engaged in press work … in Israel or abroad, on a permanent basis … during the year prior to my application for renewal. [This is despite the regular publication of my articles on this website and elsewhere throughout the entire year…] And, the GPO letter suggests that it has not been proven to its satisfaction that (3) I “arrived in Israel for the performance of services in the field of news media for the period of at least one year, at the request of the Media, and an express and binding work order/contract requesting these services was presented to the GPO” [though I arrived with a valid contract and have had a GPO press card for more than 2.5 years]. The GPO letter then informs me that I am “entitled to submit an objection in writing to the Prime Minister’s Office Legal Adviser with [sic] thirty days of receiving this notice The objection will be discussed in committee according to the rules”. The letter is signed by Daniel Seaman, Director of the Government Oress Office. When I spoke to him on Sunday, he told me that this had not been brought to his attention — but that I could appeal. “We do not decide who is a journalist”, he told me, “we just decide who is eligible for a GPO card”. I have had a GPO press card since May 2007. I presented a valid work contract upon my arrival, from a media for whom I had worked for over a year prior to my arrival. Since then, I have been working continuously and exclusively as a journalist. Last year, when there was an issue over what kind of press card I would be issued, Danny Seaman said to me: “Do you think we don’t know what you write? I don’t agree with it, but, I recognize you are a professional journalist. We read everything. We even read your blog”. Now, facing the possibility of not having my GPO card renewed, what kind of visa can I ask for? The only other possibility would be the usual three-month tourist visa. If I were obliged to ask for that, would I be accused of lying? And, if I were granted such a visa, I would have to travel in and out of Israel (and the occupied Palestinian territory — because for this purpose, if for no other, the Palestinian areas do not count as “another country”) at great expense and inconvenience, with great uncertainty at every return, every three months…

And, by the way, both this year and last year, Danny Seaman informed me that I can stay in the country for up to two months after my visa expires — “especially as an American” — without any problem. When I asked him if he could put this in writing, he declined. But the Ministry of Interior is now saying that among their objections to Jared Malsin (and Faith Rowold) is that they have overstayed their visas by a few days.

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On January 29, 2007, the Israeli GPO sent out an email to journalists containing the “translation of the unedited verbatim transcript of the Knesset Internal Affairs and Environment Committee meeting (http://tinyurl.com/yczjf3) regarding foreign journalists’ visas, on 20.11.2006”. It is a fascinating document.

In it, MK [Member of Knesset] Ahmad Tibi opens the session by stating that “Today, there are approximately 800 foreign journalists in the country covering issues both inside the State of Israel and in the Palestinian Administration (PA) areas. Usually, foreign journalists arrive for a period of three-to-five years. However, approximately 20 journalists have been in the country for over 10 years. The Entry into Israel Law does not distinguish between foreign journalists and other foreign workers, all of whom receive B-1 visas. The visas are valid for 36 months and their validity is not extended except in exceptional cases. A foreign journalist in Israel must – in order to be here – hold a B-1 visa and a foreign press card from the GPO, headed by Daniel Seaman. A foreign journalist whose B-1 visa has expired needs a letter-of-recommendation from the GPO, i.e. he needs a letter-of-recommendation from the Government, of the Prime Minister’s Office which, on the face of it, seems improper. In order for the reporting to be professional a journalist must depend solely on professional elements, in the Interior Ministry alone, and not on the recommendation of those he reports on. What is this like? For example, if his report is critical of Ahmed Tibi and then I need to give him a recommendation and I do not give it and I do not extend the validity of his visa. Therefore, journalists believe that the visa is a tool for controlling their reporting. If ‘those high up’ are not satisfied with a certain journalist, he greatly suffers from the fact that his visa is not extended or he is given the runaround or he does not receive a letter-of-recommendation from the GPO”.

There was a lengthy but revealing exchange between committee members and the Ministry of Interior spokeswoman, of which excerpts follow below:
Moshe Gafni: … A journalist is called a foreign worker?
Sabin Hadad [
then, as now, Ministry of Interior spokeswoman]: He [sic] has a foreign worker’s visa.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: As a journalist, he is subject to the Entry Into Israel Law, like a foreign worker.
Moshe Gafni: Doesn’t he have a press card that gives him a different status from other foreign workers?
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Foreign journalists receive a visa for 63 months, five years and three months. At the end of this period, if Reuters and its correspondent continue the contacts between them, they apply to the GPO, receive a recommendation for one year and the Population Administration approves an extension for one year. At the end of the year they must apply again and repeat the same procedure.
Ahmed Tibi: Or they don’t get a recommendation.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: We will yet hear if they receive a recommendation or not, there is data. This proposal is here before us today for us to discuss. There are people who believe that journalists need to receive separate visas in order to maintain freedom of the press, so that they will have quiet and not depend on the GPO, and who claim that 63 months is not enough.

Sabin Hadad: As far as we know, during the last five years, there have been no problems, at least we haven’t heard of any. The simple procedure – correspondents go to the GPO, the GPO determines who is defined as a journalist and who not. I, in the Interior Ministry, have not monitored the journalists, I do not have the professional tools to check who is actually a journalist and who not. That is the GPO’s job and they do it just fine. During the first five years journalists do everything via the GPO … Only in recent months has a problem come up regarding extending the visas beyond five years. They started to say: Yes, extend. No, don’t extend. There are specific provisions in the law stating what to do after five years, there is an exceptional case. For five years, those who want to, can work. Any expert and any foreign worker who wants to work beyond five years, first of all, if it’s approved, the approval is for one year only according to the recommendations of the relevant ministers.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: What happens after the sixth year?
Sabin Hadad: A journalist who wants to continue working here even after the sixth year and his newspaper continues to employ him brings the same recommendation to the Interior Ministry, but the process is more complicated, there are no automatic extensions … The decision is the Interior Minister’s in the end.
Chairman Raleb Majadele:: Who does this, the journalist himself or the GPO?
Sabin Hadad: This is part of the new procedure that has been agreed upon. In the discussions we held with external elements, including the Prime Minister’s Bureau, the Foreign Minister’s Bureau, the Interior Minister, and in the past week we also held a discussion with FPA representatives, it was decided that in extensions beyond five years, the determination of who is a journalist and who not will still be the GPO’s but they will not make recommendations. The decision is the Population Administration’s and we announce the decision in advance: In the absence of another factor – criminal, security, etc. – we will extend visas for foreign journalists, for one year each time, and we will not refuse. The agreement is that we will extend in the absence of other factors.
Chairman Raleb Majadele:: Is the agreement current, that you have agreed to forego the recommendation of the GPO?
Sabin Hadad: It is not a recommendation. They only decide who is considered a journalist and who is not, that’s their job.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: I am not going into the professional aspect. Have you decided to forego the recommendation of the GPO?
Sabin Hadad: It is possible to say that we have foregone the recommendation.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Meaning that a journalist whose 63 months in Israel are up brings directly to you the confirmation of his continued employment by his newspaper abroad and you clarify with the GPO whether or not he is a journalist?
Shalom Ben-Moshe: They confirm that he is a journalist working in the country.
Sabin Hadad: He goes to the GPO with confirmation that he’s a journalist and we make a decision, whether or not to extend his visa. We do not receive a recommendation from the GPO: I recommend to extend or not. We only receive confirmation regarding his employment as a journalist. Another thing that was made clear by our Legal Adviser during the meetings is that if they tell us that after five years a person is no longer a journalist, it’s not the end of the story”.

Shalom Ben-Moshe [Director of the Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry Foreign Workers Unit]: I am the head of the Unit for Foreign Workers and I am the one who issues work permits in the country. In effect, not every non-Israeli in whatever work in the country is called a foreign worker. They can be university professors and there are these, scientists and soccer coaches and women foreign workers from the Philipines and journalists as well … The law determines that whoever wants to work in Israel must submit an application for a work permit, and it is not currently important from who. He receives a work permit for a year and renews his work permit annually. If he is an expert in the medical field, for instance, he must bring a permit from the Health Ministry that he is indeed an expert in his field; if he is a university scientist, he must bring a permit from the university; if he is a soccer coach, he must bring a permit from the soccer federation that he is indeed a coach.
Ahmed Tibi: That’s all. A recommendation that he is a good player is not required.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Then there is positive discrimination in favor of journalists that they get visas for 63 months?
Shalom Ben-Moshe: No. The visa is renewed every year, for up to five years, for up to 63 months. After 63 months, the law determines that a person cannot stay in the country for any reason, he must leave the country. If he wants to work beyond this period he must submit a special request, which comes to me.

Chairman Raleb Majadele: Then what is the GPO needed for?
Shalom Ben-Moshe: According to the new arrangement, the GPO confirms that the person is indeed a journalist and works for this or that recognized foreign company. Up until now, it recommended and from now it confirms that the person is indeed a journalist working for this or that newspaper.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Journalists are like scientists?
Shalom Ben-Moshe: Exactly, like doctors, scientists or any other worker.

Ahmed Tibi: This position of yours has been known for a month or two. In practice, have Mr. Jorg Bremer, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung correspondent, and Ms. Wafa Amar, the Reuters correspondent, received extensions? They applied, there is confirmation that they are journalists, Reuters and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung have applied as official insitutions to the GPO and to you. Have you issued them visas?
Sabin Hadad: Wafa Amar’s visa was approved already a year ago but nobody did anything. They spoke to us at the end of February, they asked what was happening with the year visa. We said that the GPO has the confirmation and that they should go there. They didn’t. Until a week ago, when we renewed it for another year, they didn’t do anything. That is, she was here and for 1.5 years illegally so, of her own volition. Her visa from September 2005 had been approved.
Ahmed Tibi: Now that she will apply, will she receive?
Sabin Hadad: She came a week ago and has already received it.
Moshe Gafni: Why didn’t she come to take the visa?
Ahmed Tibi: They sent her all over the place. I know her. There is a problem with Mr. Seaman. Maybe he will be able to comment on this.

Chairman Raleb Majadele: I believe that the Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry, and the Interior Ministry, and the Population Administration, and the GPO champion freedom of expression and freedom of the press. I am sure of it.
Sara Marom-Shalev
[MK – member of committee] : Why did they bring this up then?
Shalom Ben-Moshe: I do not recall an instance in which a journalist who asked did not receive an answer.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Why did it have to come to this? What interest does the State of Israel have in visa extensions for foreign journalists coming up for a Knesset committee discussion? … What interest do we have? We want a country that receives people cheerfully. Who has an interest here? We invest a lot of money in our overseas emissaries so that they will promote the state’s image. Here, we could do this for free. True, one cannot trust everything that’s written in a newspaper, but do we need to discuss this? Who needs such a thing? We want to be a state that is counted among the free, democratic and enlightened countries that is an example for others, and we can be like this.
Daniel Seaman: I would like to thank the Chairman and MK Tibi for giving us the opportunity to clarify the issues. As you see, many things are not clear. You asked a correct question, why did it need to come to this? As someone who deals with the issue, having worked with the press for 15 years, six of these as the [GPO] Director, I say that there didn’t have to be this problem. The GPO has never strayed into areas that are the jurisdiction of the Interior Ministry or the Population Administration. Moreover, I can only commend their work, their responsiveness, their readiness to help us. I have no arguments with these bodies and whoever testifies against them does not understand the issue.
I would like to vigorously reject any hint to the effect that the GPO works according to invalid considerations. First of all, there is no recommendation from the GPO and there never was. I note the example of the letter we wrote for Mr. Jorg Bremer, an action that the GPO does as a service to foreign journalists. I can attest to MK Ahmed Tibi that even if a journalist was critical of him, we do not invalidate a correspondent because of his criticism of MK Ahmed Tibi. We do not enter into the contents of journalists’ reports … The GPO is the body that identifies journalists in Israel, especially foreign journalists. Many people come here and indentify themselves. We work according to rules that have been approved by the Attorney General’s Office. They were approved by the High Court of Justice and were amended according to High Court of Justice decisions over the years. The decision of who is a journalist and who not is given via a GPO card. Afterwards, the bearer of our cards – and there are several kinds – is eligible for the services of the GPO.
In practice, as has been mentioned, the journalist can do everything directly with the Interior Ministry, the Population Administration and the Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry. The journalists can apply to them directly and then the Population Administration asks the GPO if the person is recognized by us as a journalist, that’s all. In practice, I approve that a person has a press card, no more. True, the letter opens with the words ‘I recommend’; we thought to put it positively but there is no letter that says ‘I do not recommend.’ I know of no person who carries a GPO card who did not receive the GPO’s recommendation when he applied to us. By the way, this is not required. Journalists can come and take only the letter but we do more. An employee of mine, Ms. Sharon Goldhammer, basically does the work for journalists so that they do not need to stand in line, in order to help those who come from different cultures. You know this, cultural differences can lead to misunderstandings. We help them so that everything is done in one office: A journalist arriving in the country does everything via the GPO as a service of the State to those journalists.
[
n.b., a year ago, around the beginning of 2009, journalists were informed that Sharon Goldhammer was no longer doing this service for journalists — on the apparent basis that a journalist had been rude to her. This change may or may not have been in practice for a few months already in 2008. In any case, the journalists now have to stand in line at the chaotic Ministry of Interior.]

Daniel Seaman: … [As] has been said here, we identify this person as a journalist. By the way, many foreign journalists do not speak Hebrew. With English or Arabic, it is yet possible to get by at the Interior Ministry but a Japanese or Chinese journalist, a journalist who speaks Turkish, French or another language, will encounter difficulties at the Interior Ministry. The GPO does everything for them. If there is a misunderstanding, if the forms are not filled in, it’s done for them, they do not have to run all over the place. We know how the bureaucratic processes go in the country, not only at the Interior Ministry but at all ministries. There is an English expression that ‘No good deed goes unpunished’ – this is our case exactly. The service that we have tried to provide journalists, to arrange things for them, somebody tried to use it to cast suspicions to the effect that irrelevant considerations come into play here. I reiterate, the content of publications and even the issue of freedom of expression, is not a consideration at all, it doesn’t even come into it. The person wants service from the Interior Ministry. If he is not recognized by us as a journalist, he does not receive a letter from us, this is where everything starts and ends. True, we wrote ‘recommend’ for appearance’s sake, that it should look nice. Do you want us to delete the word ‘recommend’? We’ll delete it. For historical background: A journalist who comes here, in the first five years, must renew his visa annually, for himself and his family. With this process there is no problem. In the past, the same process applied for beyond five years. The problem began in February three years ago when the legislature enacted a law that restricts presence [in the country] to 63 months. This is where we encountered the first problems. Despite the journalists’ position and their suspicion that someone among us, in the bureaucracy, is trying to harm them, the consideration is not ours. Moreover, neither us, nor the Interior Ministry, nor the clerks, nor the GPO, has the job of criticizing the legislature. You decide – we carry it out. No thought was given regarding journalist, so we decided to try to find a solution within the system. We brought several proposals. To our dismay, there have been three Interior Ministers in three years, including the Prime Minister in an acting capacity, and whenever a decision by the Interior Minister was needed, the process was postponed, but the Population Administration and the Interior Ministry responded to each and every applicant. In the specific instance of Mr. Jorg Bremer, there was no reason for the issue to reach the press. He applied to us in September, using the same process that everyone does, and we dealt with him like we deal with everyone. He was only asked to wait patiently until after the holidays for the committee to convene.
Ahmed Tibi: You certainly regret the remarks that were published in the newspaper and attributed to you.
Daniel Seaman: I regret that it was published. This certainly wasn’t my official reaction to things. I was certainly angry with the journalist’s false testimony that was presented. It was claimed in the newspaper that Mr. Jorg Bremer had not been treated fairly. Here is a photograph of the flowers that he sent to my employee [shows a photograph of a bouqet of flowers to the committee]. If this is his response to unfair treatment, I don’t know how he responds to fair treatment. I don’t know what he felt. I know that he received good service. I must point out that the GPO Director is not involved in the process. I have a faithful employee who deals with journalists, knows them, and deals with all of their personal needs. She also dealt with this issue. Mr. Jorg Bremer was a bit anxious, didn’t believe in the system and asked to speak to me. I was happy to help him. I don’t know how pleased I am today but I was happy then to help him. I certainly reget the remarks and I am even ashamed of them. I will try not to repeat them, certainly not to journalists.

Chairman Raleb Majadele: You said that there has been a turnover of Interior Ministers and that as an organization you want to promote solutions for journalists. Where do things stand?
Daniel Seaman: In practice, the solution is already working, therefore we did not understand what was the need. In the newspaper, it was presented as if I was telling him to conceal some truth. I asked him not to take steps because the system works. Why make noise on this issue at the moment? Until his application, 15 journalists’ applications had been submitted, including that of the person sitting here, the head of the BBC office, who – as far as I know – was the first for whom an application for an exception had been submitted, and everybody responded positively. In Mr. Jorg Bremer’s case, he was impatient to wait until the committee convened.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Are there Foreign Ministry representatives here? What is your position?
Tamar Sam-Ash:
We are interested that a solution be found for everyone in the framework of the law. As I understand it, the solution is at hand. We are certainly interested that journalists here will be able to do their work as efficiently as possible and report on what happens in the country as they see it.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: Representatives of the FPA [Foreign Press Association] may speak. Anybody care to comment?
Simon MacGregor [FPA] : I would like to thank you for inviting us here today. It is a pleasure to be here. After having listened to the testimony that has been presented here, it is difficult to identify where in the system the problem lays. We have the impression that there is a new approach of cooperation and a desire to improve the process of renewing visas for those who stay beyond five years and make it smoother. It is also true to say that in the past year we have encountered problems in the visa-renewal system and in the lack of transparency, which our members find difficult to understand. Several cases were brought to our attention in which the renewal of the visa took much longer than it should have. As of yesterday, two of our German colleagues, who checked again at the Interior Ministry, have still not had their visas renewed. It is possible that the delay is for bureaucratic reasons.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: As of yesterday they did not have visas. Has the validity of their visas expired, are they now in the country illegally or is there still time until their visas expire?
Simon MacGregor: From a work permit point-of-view, they are now working illegally.
Ahmed Tibi: Even though they submitted applications.
Sabin Hadad: They are in the country illegally because they did not go and do it, but the computer already lists them as having received visas. I said this yesterday as well. There is a misunderstanding here. I spoke with the visa department today myself and I even went one step further and called Mr. Bremer to tell him to go to the Ministry to bring the visa.
David Azoulay: From which office will the visa be obtained, from the Population Administration?
Sabin Hadad: Yes. Maybe there was some misunderstanding about the place.
Daniel Seaman: As soon as the process started, a journalist works legally. When he is in the process, he is not an illegal worker.


Sara Marom-Shalev : … I am sure that a journalist can not be like any foreign worker. The status of a journalist must be different. He doesn’t need approval from the Ministry of Industry Trade and Labor. There is the Interior Ministry, there is the GPO – these two need to discuss with the Ministry of Industry Trade and Labor. A journalist that is a foreign worker – that’s a bit strange.
Shalom Ben-Moshe: Then the law should be changed. A person working in Israel needs to receive a permit.
Ahmed Tibi: Its possible to include them in a specific group and give them a press visa.
Shalom Ben-Moshe: The foreign journalist is no different than the foreign professor who comes to work in a university.

Sara Marom-Shalev: We must be more wary of journalists than with professors.
Shalom Ben-Moshe: But there is no difficulty to give him a work permit.
Ahmed Tibi: How many journalists are waiting to have their visas renewed?
Sharon Goldhammer: Not even one is waiting in my department. There is one journalist who will receive a visa renewal tomorrow morning.
Ahmed Tibi: What about Ms. Wafa Amar?
Sharon Goldhammer: I am responsible for foreign journalists only. I must say that this functions very effectively. A journalist who submits a request to the committee waits 30 days at the most in order to receive an answer….
Naama Pelai [attorney from the Interior Ministry Legal Adviser’s Office]: In the Entry into Israel Law no special visa has been determined for journalists. The relevent visa is a visa for foreign workers. A foreign worker is also a foreign worker in construction, agriculture or nursing care, as well as an expert – a bank manager, an athlete and so on. Therefore, presently, as far as the law is concerned, there is no other way to define a journalist other than a foreign worker B/1 visa. This allows for an extension after five years in special circumstances as defined in the paragraph, and in that framework a way was found to extend journalists’ visas after five years. We are working on amending the regulations, that will determine precisely the types of people for whom it will be possible to grant an extension after five years. Groups will be specifically defined for which an extension will be given after five years. But even today it functions within the framework of the paragraph of the law. Legally, these are the only ways available today to resolve this problem and it is impossible to do this with a special visa or special license.
Chairman Raleb Majadele: I haven’t heard where the visa request of Ms. Wafa Amar from Reuters stands.
Sabin Hadad: I thought that that was closed. A week ago she was in the office. They called from the office to see if it was approved, and it was approved.
Ahmed Tibi: This morning she still did not have a visa” …

*************************

In Jared Malsin’s case — though it has not been stated by anyone (or even hinted at) — perhaps the only possibility is that officials of the Israeli government think that Ma’an News Agency itself should have, or could have, made an effort via the Palestinian Authority to request a work permit from Israel?  Otherwise, what other avenue is there?   This is not at all clear.

*************************

UPDATE SIX: The NY-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has written on the organization’s website that “The Israeli Ministry of Interior issued a deportation order on Wednesday morning against Malsin for ‘security reasons’, according to his lawyer, Castro Daoud.  ‘Interrogation transcripts show that Malsin was deemed a security risk because of his political beliefs’, Daoud told CPJ.  ‘Security at the airport gathered news stories written by him which they deemed critical of the State of Israel’. He added that security officials also interrogated Malsin about a pro-Palestinian activist group called the International Solidarity Movement. ‘My client has no affiliation with any activist group; the allegations that he represents a security risk are baseless’, Daoud added.  ‘We are alarmed by the Israeli government’s efforts to deport Jared Malsin on vague security charges’, said CPJ Middle East and North Africa Program Coordinator Mohamed Abdel Dayem.  ‘We call on the Israeli authorities to ensure that our colleague be allowed to carry out his work without further harassment’.  Malsin was slated for expulsion back to Prague at 6:05 a.m. on January 14 but Daoud succeeded in obtaining an injunction against the order.  ‘We successfully appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court to overrule the Ministry of Interior’s decision thanks to pressure from the U.S. Embassy’, Daoud told CPJ.   Israeli authorities do not recognize Ma’an as a news organization and as such Malsin has been entering Israel and the Occupied Territories on three-month visitor’s visas.  Malsin’s colleagues say that he is known to the Israeli military and civilian authorities and had recently been invited to tour a military base on a settlement in the occupied West Bank.  Malsin has been denied access to a shower, clean clothes, and reading and writing materials, according to Hale, who was able to briefly talk to Malsin on Thursday morning”.  This CPJ notice is posted here

.

A new facebook group: Jerusalem-based journalists objecting to editor's requests for Bethlehem holiday stories

Found on Facebook – a new group, “Reporters against whiny Christmas stories in Bethlehem” who say their common interest is “Philosophy”, and whose manifesto reads:
A rebel group of Jerusalem-based reporters has reacted to the decade-long tradition of Bethlehem holiday stories by refusing to accept any holiday cheer this season. Refusing editors’ requests for ‘Christmas in the holy land’ tales of Palestinian woe and tourist shows, the group has announced it will refrain from filing any articles until an actual news event occurs. ‘We are doing this for the good of our readers. Who, if they have any memory whatsoever, will recall that we have written the exact same Bethlehem story for the past four years’, said a spokesman for the group. He continued that the decision was also financial, hoping to save the dying newspaper industry the cost of commissioning a new piece when they could just rewrite the previous versions. One journalist, who asked to remain anonymous, said the rebel group was trying to quell more extreme elements who called for a torching of all olive-wood products made in Bethlehem, and the expelling of shopkeepers who whined excessively“.
The group has 78 members.

This is the group’s icon image:

Reporters against whiny Christmas stories in Bethlehem website

Fatah resists reconciliation?

According to a summary translation from the Hebrew-language press published today, Prof. Eyal Zisser wrote in Yisrael Hayom that in the sort-of-just-concluded [there has been no official announcement yet of voting results, and there was no closing ceremony] Sixth Fatah General Conference held in Bethlehem, “many of those who were elected to leadership positions – Marwan Barghouti, Jibril Rajoub, Muhammad Dahlan and Tewfik Tirawi, et. al. – rose to prominence during the first intifada. The author believes that Fatah’s ‘new-old leadership’, is trying, ‘to renew its appeal and embark on a new path,” in its continuing struggle, not with Israel, but against Hamas’.” This translation was done by the Israeli Government Press Office, and sent by email.

Khaled Abu Toameh wrote an article published today in the Jerusalem Post saying that “Many of the newly-elected members of Fatah’s Central Committee may be younger than their ousted predecessors, but that does not necessarily mean that they are more reform-minded or less corrupt. Nor does the election of the young guard representatives signal a shift toward moderation. Fatah must be given credit for getting rid of many old guard figures whose names have become synonymous with embezzlement, financial corruption and abuse of power. But who said that the new members of the Central Committee are any better? The assumption that Muhammad Dahlan, Jibril Rajoub, Marwan Barghouti and Tawfik Tirawi are more moderate than old-timers like Ahmed Qurei, Nabil Sha’ath and Hani al-Hassan is completely mistaken”.

Abu Toameh added that “Dahlan, Rajoub and Tirawi are all former security commanders who served as Yasser Arafat’s henchmen and enforcers after the establishment of the Palestinian Authority … The three men can be described as anything but reformists and moderates. They are best remembered for building detention centers, prisons, big villas and a casino for the Palestinians. The main task of the security forces they presided over was to suppress and intimidate political opponents, human rights workers, journalists and anyone who dared to challenge Fatah’s corruption-riddled regime … During the Fatah meetings in Bethlehem, most of the young guard activists appeared to be more radical than their older colleagues, especially with regards to the peace process with Israel. The power struggle between the old and new guards in Fatah has never been over ideology or the future of the peace process. On these issues, there’s almost no difference between Barghouti’s views and those of Sha’ath and Qurei.  Rather, it’s a power struggle between a camp that for two decades denied young guard activists a larger say in decision-making and access to public funds and jobs, and those younger activists.  What’s certain is that the change of guard does not necessarily mean that Fatah is about to regain the confidence of a majority of disillusioned Palestinians. Nor does it show that Fatah is on its way to reforming itself or softening its policies”. This Abu Toameh analysis can be read in full here .

Ali Waked reported in YNet that Fatah women are not happy with the election, which resulted in an all-male Central Committee:  ” ‘We formed a coalition with the men, but they betrayed us; they were voted in due to our support, but they failed to reciprocate’, Intissar al-Wasir said Tuesday after all the female candidates failed to gain a seat on Fatah’s 21-member Central Committee at the movement’s landmark conference in Bethlehem.  The Women’s Committee demanded that at least 30% of those elected to Fatah’s governing bodies be women, but the demand was rejected. Women Fatah activists complained that ‘the primitive male Fatah members’ had purposely prevented them from being elected.  ‘This is a backward male-dominated society’, one prominent female activist said.  While the votes for Fatah’s Revolutionary Council are still being tallied, it appears that female representation in the movement’s second most important body will also be low. The female front-runner in the Revolutionary Council elections is Marwan Barghouti’s wife, Fadwa”.   Ali Waked’s report is posted here.

Fatah leadership in Gaza resigns after Bethlehem election - 12 August 2009

Meanwhile, Ma’an News Agency in Bethlehem is reporting that “The Fatah higher leadership committee in the Gaza Strip submitted its resignation on Wednesday, a day after the movement elected new leadership. The resignation was submitted to President Mahmoud Abbas, and the movement’s Central Committee, the governing body the movement elected this week. Head of the Gaza Fatah committee Zakariya Al-Agha said the resignation was not, as rumored, a protest against the results of the Central Committee elections. ‘The resignation is a legal procedure following the elections, and the Central Committee will have to make a decision about it. What was published in the media about the resignation being in protest against results of elections is untrue’, said Al-Agha, who stood for reelection to the Central Committee but lost in the election. Earlier on Wednesday, senior Fatah leader in the Gaza Strip Ibrahim Abu An-Naja called on President Abbas, the Fatah congress president, and head of the party’s elections committee to consider allowing Fatah delegates in Gaza another chance to vote. ‘Several delegates did not receive telephone calls from the congress so as to vote’, said Abu Naja. The Central Committee election results were released on Tuesday after Gazan delegates were given several [many, very many] extra hours to vote by phone”. This Ma’an report, which is rather unclear and inconclusive, can be read in full here.

This Ma’an story mentioned that Mohammad Dahlan and Nabil Sha’ath are two Fatah electees to the new Central Council who are originally from Gaza. Nasser al-Qudwa is a third.

In a separate account about a gentlemanly statement issued by Nabil Sha’ath, Ma’an reported Wednesday that “Sha’ath also addressed candidates who failed to gain one of 18 elected seats on the Central Committee asserting that all of them had ‘served their homeland’ and deserve due respect. ‘They should give advice and extend every possible effort because we have hard work to do, and great tasks to carry out in order to resume unity of our homeland, and secure independence, return of refugees and release of prisoners”. In the same report, Ma’an addes that “In reaching national unity, Fatah faces the task of reconciling with arch-rival Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip. In light of the Central Committee elections, the task will not be easy. While some of the new members are from Fatah’s younger generations, they also include members of the anti-Hamas camp such as the former Gaza security commander Muhammad Dahlan and former West Bank intelligence chief Tawfiq Tirawi”. This Ma’an article can be read in full strong>here

New Fatah leadership – results leaking, not announced

As far as I can tell — and I took the trouble to come again to Bethlehem and even to stay overnight, and though I have made and received at least a dozen phone calls this morning — here has not yet been an official announcement for results of who won seats in the Fatah General Conference voting for either the “new” Central Committee or the “new” Revolutionary Council.

However, there have been indications that the results were tallied hours ago, perhaps soon after midnight for the 18 seats up for election in the Central Committee, and perhaps by early this morning for the 80 seats on the Revolutionary Council.

Of course, what this means is that the Palestinian and Arab media have published various lists of supposedly winning names which are said to be NOT FINAL.

However, it appears clear that nobody who opposed The Machine won.

And two of the winners are Mohammad Dahlan and Jibril Rajoub, two former leaders of Fatah/Palestinian Preventive Security (Dahlan in Gaza and Rajoub in the West Bank), who have an intense rivalry.

Ahmad Qureia (Abu Alaa’), who headed the Palestinian negotiations team during the Annapolis Process, and who, like President and Party leader Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), was one of the key negotiators during the secret negotiations that led up to the Oslo process in the early 1990s, was not on the list that was read to me at breakfast time.

Also not elected, according to my source, are Qaddura Fares, Hussam Khader (who said he knew he would not win, but ran anyway — and one Fatah operative told me that he saw Hussam Qader’s name on many of the unofficial lists that were circulating before the vote, so he had a good chance), and Sari Nusseibeh (for whom this candidacy appears to have been a political come-back and a political rehabiiltation, and he can now come back in from the cold. Nusseibeh was interviewed for an hour on Palestine TV last night, and none of his red lines were crossed, he was not personally attacked. Nusseibeh did say that this sixth Fatah General Conferene or Congress shows that neither the Americans nor the Europeans have anything to teach the Palestinians about democracy.

Among the other reported winners are Salim Zaanoun, Abu Maher – Mohammed Ghneim, Tawfik at-Tirawi, Hussein ash-Sheikh, and Othman Abu Gharbiya, Nabil Shaath, Saeb Erekat, Nasser Qudwa, Mohammed Shtayyah. Then, Sultan Abu Al- Eineen, Jamal Mheisen, Mohammed a-Madani, Mahmoud al-Aloul.

UPDATE: Apparently, our earlier report that Tayib Abdel Rahim was one of the 18 winning candidates was wrong. I am told he came in 19th. I am also told that the names of the other two winning names that were not available to me earlier are: Azzam al-Ahmad and Abbas Zaki, the official PLO representative in Lebanon. We are also told that President Abbas has sent out the word that the results are NOT FINAL.

And of course, another winner was the highest-profile Palestinian political prisoner, Marwan Barghouthi, currently serving several life sentences in an Israeli prison for leading the Fatah Tanzim during the second intifada — but who even some Israeli ministers would like to see freed. He was on all the (unofficial) lists. “It would be a shame if Marwan didn’t win”, one Fatah source said during the voting.

The interesting question now will be, what will Abu Mazen do with the four seats that he has been authorized to nominate (he has to then get the approval of two-thirds of the new Central Committee, and two-thirds of the new Revolutionary Council), to officially appoint these nominees. I am willing to bet that three of the four appointees will be: Abu Alaa’, Farouk Kaddoumi, and Sari Nusseibeh.

The Revolutionary Council results will not be ready until later today, I was told. But I noticed one person being told who (probably himself) won the 17th place out of 641 candidates.

Fatah extends voting hours to try to get Gaza delegates' participationcorary

The Fatah Conference in Bethlehem has decided to extend voting for elections of new members to the organization’s two ruling bodies, the Central Committee and the Revolutionary Council. The vote has been extended until 3pm [UPDATE: now extended to 4 pm Jerusalem time] this afternoon to try to get the participation of 150 delegates from Gaza who were not able or who were not willing to be present in Bethlehem because of obstacles they say were put in their way by the rival Hamas party who are the de facto authority in the Gaza Strip.

FURTHER UPDATE: VOTING WAS EXTENDED AGAIN UNTIL 7 pm, and perhaps again until 9 pm to accomodate those from Gaza. Counting will not begin until 9 pm. If no recount is necessary, results could be announced in three to four hours.

A member of the Conference secretariat said a few days ago that some 350 delegates from Gaza were actually in Bethlehem — and that because this majority of Gazan delegates was actually present in Bethlehem, it created the legal possibility for the vote to go ahead.

Many of the 350 Gaza delegates actually in Bethlehem, however, have not been in Gaza since the June 2007 rout of Fatah-led Preventive Security Forces by Hamas military fighters — and they live either in Ramallah, or in Cairo, or somewhere else abroad. Nevertheless, some dozens of Gaza members of Fatah did get out of Gaza by various unclear ways before the Bethlehem conference and on its opening day.

Israel did close all border crossings into Gaza for three days before the Bethlehem conference started, making it convenient and possible to coordinate surreptitious and/or discrete passage of approved Fatah delegates.

Palestinian officials and a Conference secretariat source said that Hamas confiscated mobile phones on which the 150 Fatah delegates still blocked in Gaza were to have voted, and their computers as well, and cut off their internet and telephone connections.

A Hamas delegation made a surprise trip to Egypt over the weekend are are in consultations with Egyptian officials there.

But, the death of a Hamas detainee in a West Bank jail — reportedly from torture at the hands of Palestinian Authority security services — will probably not help this situation much. The release of all Hamas detainees in West Bank jails was a condition for Fatah delegates in Gaza to be able to leave to attend the Bethlehem Conference. And, the detentions have continued throughout the conference, with 16 Hamas supporters reportedly detained in the West Bank on Thursday, and another three detained on Sunday.

Israel also denied permission for a few Fatah delegates in Gaza to transit the country in order to get to Bethlehem to attend the Sixth General Conference.

Vote counting will take at least 12 to 14 hours, according to a source in the Conference secretariat and other Palestinian officials, because of the large number of candidates — 104 for 18 seats in the Central Committee, and around 600 for 80 slots in the Revolutionary Council.

However, journalists report that perhaps the Central Committee counting may be announced late on Monday, perhaps around midnight, while the Revolutionary Council results will be finally announced on Tuesday.

The Pope in Palestine

Today the Pope will spend the whole day in Bethlehem — in the occupied West Bank.

His visit will start with an early morning visit to Rachel’s Tomb, which is right next to Aida (Palestinian) refugee camp, but now totally surrounded by 9-meter-high concrete slabs of The Wall, guarded by Israeli Border Police and soldiers, with massive sliding metal gates on the Jerusalem and on the Bethlehem sides.

Then, the Pope will be greeted in the Bethlehem Presidential Palace by President Mahmoud Abbas and various other Palestinian Authority figures. He will visit the Church of the Nativity. And, in the afternoon, he will be received in Aida refugee camp.

The Pope arrives in Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem

Wednesday – ALL PALESTINIAN DAY
GPO schedule
08:00-19:00 Visit to Bethlehem

PA schedule
Bethlehem Wednesday, May13th,2009
08:30 Arrival to Rachel’s Tomb.
09:00 Welcome Ceremony at the Presidential Palace.
10:00 To the Manger Square/ Holy mass.
16:10 Visit to the Caritas Baby Hospital.
16:45 Visit to the Aida Refugee Camp.
17:45 Return to the Presidential Palace.
18:00 Courtesy visit to the Palestinian President.
18:40 Farewell ceremony.

This photo shows Pope Benedict XVI in Popemobile in convoy of vehicles accompanying him to Aida refugee camp, where the large key symbolizes the keys to the houses that Palestinians lost when they became refugees in 1948, during the conflict that surrounded the creation of the State of Israel.

Pope in Popemobile in convoy at Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem

The Aida camp committee wanted to host the Pope in a special amphitheatre it had built of stone (at a cost of some $90,000) right alongside The Wall, but the Israeli military ordered a change in those plans. The ceremonial visit was moved to the small schoolyard of an UNRWA boys school directly across the street from the amphitheatre. However, it was used to position a boy scout band who stood on the stone seats while playing music to herald the Pope’s arrival and departure.  Camp residents expressed concerns that Israeli forces would come and destroy the amphitheatre after the Pope’s visit.

During his visit to Aida, the Pope was given a special gift of an embroidered scarf, which he immediately put around his neck. The colors complemented his white clerical robes and large gold crucifix. The scarf was white, and embroidered with a pair of red eight-point Bethlehem stars, and then a pair of golden Vatican-logo keys (the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven) on one side, with a symbolic Palestinian house key — like the one on the arch over Aida camp — on the other. The woman who embroidered the scarf, Maha Saca of Bethlehem’s Palestinian Heritage Center, said she believed it was “very important for him to have with him the key of the return”.

In the photo below, the Pope, wearing his new scarf, greeting Daoud al-Azraq, the father of the longest-held or oldest (or both, the figure of twenty years was mentioned, but it wasn’t clear) Palestinian prisoner in Israel.  to the right of the Pope (and mostly obscured by Daoud al-Azraq) is Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.  Next to Abbas is Palestinian Preime Minister Salam Fayyad.  Next to Fayyad is UNRWA Commissioner-General Karen AbuZayd.

The Pope wearing the special embroidered scarf he was offered at Aida refugee camp - keys unfortunately not visible here

A close-up

Pope greeting Daoud al-Azraq

Another gift that the Pope was given at Aida camp was a map of Palestine carved out of a stone the camp residents had brought down from Tiberius, “where Jesus told Saint Peter that ‘You are my rock and upon you I will build our Church’, explained Issa al-Qaraaqa, a Fateh-affiliated member of the currently dormant Palestine Legislative Council elected to represent Bethlehem. And, another gift were some actual house keys belonging to the lost homes of some of the refugee camp residents, to which they hoped to return.

Pope greeting Daoud al-Azraq

Pope at ceremony at UNRWA boys school at Aida Camp in Bethlehem

AP reported that “The pontiff brought several gifts to Bethlehem, including a ventilator for a baby hospital and a mosaic representation of the birth of Jesus. He received a handwritten Gospel of Luke”. This report can be read in full here.

While at Aida refugee camp, the Pope also presented UNRWA Commissioner-General Karen Abu Zayd with a check for 70,000 Euros to reconstruct several schoolrooms in the camp.

We need bridges not walls - handpainted sign at Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem

In addition, the Pope was presented with letters written by one young (Muslim) girl from the Palestinian refugee camp, both of whose parents have been jailed by Israel for the past eight years, and from two (Christian) sisters from the Bethlehem suburb Beit Sahour (where shepherds first spotted the unusually bright Christmas star at the time of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem just over two thousands years ago, whose father is detained by Israel. This was apparently arranged by the Vatican with Palestinian prompting, to balance the Pope’s meeting a few days ago in Jerusalem with the parents of IDF Corporal Gilad Shalit, who was seized at the Gaza border in June 2006 and is apparently still being held somewhere in Gaza.

And, the Pope was presented with letters from some of the several dozen Palestinians who were deported from Bethlehem in 2002 — some to Gaza, others to various places in Europe — to defuse a stand-off after some Palestinian gunmen had sought refugee in the Church of the Nativity during a futile attempt at resistance to a massive IDF incursion aimed at stopping gunfire from the Bethlehem suburb of Beit Jala to the neighboring settlement of Gilo. An Egyptian-born Franciscan priest, Father Ibrahim Faltas, who reluctantly became the negotiator of the arrangement that ended the IDF seige of the Church of the Nativity, is now head of the Roman Catholic parish in Jerusalem, and he was present during the Pope’s visit to Bethlehem on Wednesday.

The Pope prays in the Grotto of the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem.  Father Faltas is at far left of photo.

The Pope had started his day with Palestinians in Bethlehem by making an appeal, at the Presidential Palace welcoming ceremony, to “the many young people throughout the Palestinian Territories today: do not allow the loss of life and the destruction that you have witnessed to arouse bitterness or resentment in your hearts”. The Pope then added: “Have the courage to resist any temptation you may feel to resort to acts of violence or terrorism”.

It was the Pope’s only direct mention of terrorism so far during his present trip.

By contrast, during his time in public with Israeli officials and Israeli audiences, the Pope has not, for example, spoken out against the government policy of targetted killings of Palestinians, nor against some of the harsh military strategies adopted during the IDF’s recent Operation Cast Lead in Gaza.

Nor, for that matter, has the Pope so far mentioned, during his current trip, the indiscriminate firing of rockets, mortars and missiles from Gaza onto nearby Israeli territory.

At the end of the day, the Pope returned to the Presidential Palace in Bethlehem, for a meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, and with representatives of Palestinian Christians from the West Bank and a delegation of some 93 Christians who were finally granted Israeli permits to leave Gaza to meet the Pope. Participants later reported that Dr. Eissa Tarazi (Head of the Council of Arab Orthodox Christians in Gaza) made a vivid presentation of Gaza’s suffering over the past two years, including the recent military operation in Gaza, and the debilitating effects of an Israeli-imposed blockade that includes severe economic sanctions. But, those present say, the Pope did not react. He just listened.

At that meeting, which was the last scheduled event in a long day for the Pope and everyone else in Bethlehem, the Pope was presented with a carved olive-wood model of a Christmas nativity scene, complete with the Holy Family, the animals in the manger, the Beit Sahour shepherds, the three Kings — updated by The Wall and the 9-meter-high concrete cylindrical IDF military control watchtowers.

In one of the more symbolically-significant parts of the Pope’s visit, he entered and left through a huge sliding metal gate that is part of the concrete structure of The Wall at the entrance to Bethlehem. This made it possible for the Pope to avoid going through the inspections at the main checkpoint. But, for Palestinian officials in Bethlehem, such openings in The Wall are extremely rare. “Only the Pope has opened The Wall”, one said, while watching the Pope’s unusual transit on a live video transmission in a media unit in the Bethelehm Presidential Palace. But, he added, “unfortunately it is only for a few minutes, and then The Wall is quickly closed again”.

The Israeli media has concentrated on the Pope’s remarks against The Wall.

In the Aida refugee camp, the Pope said that “Towering over us, as we gather here this afternoon, is a stark reminder of the stalemate that relations between Israelis and Palestinians seem to have reached – the wall. In a world where more and more borders are being opened up – to trade, to travel, to movement of peoples, to cultural exchanges – it is tragic to see walls still being erected.”

Later, the Pope stated that walls do not last forever, and can also be torn down. But first, he said, “it is necessary to remove the walls that we build around our hearts”.

Pope leaves Aida refugee camp - AP photo

Palestinian President Abbas said earlier, in his speech welcoming the Pope in the morning, that “In this Holy Land, the occupation still continues building separation walls, instead of building the bridge that can link us. They are using the force of occupation to force Muslims and Christians to emigrate.”

The Pope has referred only very indirectly to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory, while Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas made a number of calls during the day for an end to the Israeli occupation.

The occupation was also cited by frazzled officials in the Palestinian President’s media office, as tempers flared, in explanation for some of the organizational and logistical problems, and security excesses, that hindered journalists’ promised access to various appearances of the Pope during the day.

The Pope and The Wall – in Bethlehem

Here is The Wall outside Aida (Palestinian) refugee camp in Bethlehem.

The photo below shows Palestinian boys playing next to The Wall, where a hand-painted sign welcomes the visit of the Pope to Palestine.

Palestinian boys play next to The Wall in Bethlehem where the Pope will visit on Wednesday

Another hand-painted sign being written to welcome the Pope to Aida refugee camp – here, The Wall almost looks surreal:

A Palestinian boy paints a graffiti welcome sign for the Pope's visit to Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem

On Tuesday afternoon,  just as the Pope is at Mass in Gethsemane at the foot of the Mount of Olives in East Jerusalem, a marching band practices in advance of the Pope’s arrival here on Wednesday morning, playing drums and marching up and down on a road parallel to The Wall.

And workers were putting the final touches on the preparations, and adjusting the flags flying in Aida refugee camp.
Workers putting up flags in Aida refugee camp -- The Wall is minimized in the distance

Palestinian security forces are lining the street, but so far traffic has been moving.

It’s not clear exactly what will happen here tomorrow, but it will start early. Journalists have been asked to report for security checks at 5 am.

Bethlehem officials and the Palestinian Authority had hoped to receive the Pope on a special stage, or “amphitheater” just alongside The Wall — and Vatican officials agreed — but their plans were cancelled by Israeli military order, citing security risks.

Bethlehem, like the rest of the West Bank, is under Israeli military occupation.

In recent days, Palestinians were putting the finishing touches to the amphitheatre being prepared for Pope Benedict’s visit to Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem. But Israel has ordered a halt to construction and the Pope may not even use it when he speaks in Bethlehem on Wednesday.

A Palestinian worker takes a break from preparing a stage for Pope Benedict XVI right next to The Wall in Bethlehem

The amphitheatre being prepared beside The Wall at Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem

A Palestinian worker laying asphalt on a stage being prepared for the Pope's visit at Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem

A Palestinian man walks by a section of The Wall in Bethlehem where the Pope is expected to visit on Wednesday

The Pope will almost certainly visit the Church of the Nativity, where Jesus is believed to have been born in Bethlehem.

Pilgrims visit the Church of the Nativity in Bethelehem where Jesus is believed to have been born

Baladi vegetables from Wadi Fukhin, a Palestinian village southwest of Bethlehem

This article appeared in Haaretz about the pleasures of baladi [or, authentic home grown from the countryside] vegetables from a Palestinian West Bank village near Bethlehem.

Of note: the vegetables have to be smuggled past checkpoints to get to Jerusalem.

Sometimes, they are confiscated.

Without further comment, here is an excerpt from the Haaretz story:
Since the village was founded at the beginning of the 16th century, its farmlands have been shrinking. This was a natural process through the generations, as in the feudal estates of medieval times, when the laws of inheritance reduced the area received by each family head. In the 20th century the problem was compounded by complex geopolitical developments.

The Israeli army captured the village at the end of the War of Independence in 1948 and it became part of Jordan in the armistice agreements. In 1953, the villagers fled to refugee camps after an Israeli reprisal raid. For 20 years, they would sneak back to their fields to continue working them, until the Israeli government allowed some of them to return to their land – occupied by Israel following the 1967 war.

Since the end of the 1980s, 9,000 of the farmers’ 12,000 dunams (4 dunams = 1 acre) have been appropriated by Israel in order to build the Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) city-settlement of Betar Ilit.

The intensive construction of the city’s neighborhoods not only brutally wounded the natural ridgeline; it also hemmed in the vanishing valley from its eastern side and is blocking the natural runoff of rainwater to the village springs, which are, as a result, gradually drying up.

Only by adhering to ancient village traditions has Wadi Fukhin (population: 1,200) been able to preserve the enviable patterns of working the land that the whole world is now trying to emulate. This is small-scale agriculture, using ancient seeds of fruits and vegetables indigenous to the region, chemical-free. The traditional fertilizer was and remains the organic compost of goat droppings – most of the fellahin were in any case too poor to buy any other fertilizer.

The Friends of the Earth organization, which took the village under its wing in genuine admiration of the undeclared and vanishing nature reserve, taught the villagers additional techniques of ecological and organic farming. Those who love the earth are easily persuaded to keep it clean; some of the villagers have become true zealots not only of traditional farming, but also of “modern” organic methods.

The village’s vegetables were long famed in the markets of Hebron and Jerusalem, and fetched very high prices. But the only market currently open to produce from the village is in Bethlehem, where, the farmers complain, prices are lower.

The villagers could make a living from the burgeoning market for organic produce in Israel, but a checkpoint blocks their way…
Continue reading Baladi vegetables from Wadi Fukhin, a Palestinian village southwest of Bethlehem

Another Christmas journey to Bethlehem

BBC Correspondent Aleem Maqboul has just completed a ten-day journey — on foot, with a donkey (actually, a series of donkeys) — from Nazareth (in Israel) to Bethlehem (just south of Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank). His intention was to replicate the journey taken by Joseph and Mary some 2008 years ago, as recounted by Luke in the New Testament of the Bible.

BBC correspondent Aleem Maqboul enters Bethlehem

Maqboul wrote in his trip diary’s final entry today that “throughout history, change in this part of the world has often come unexpectedly and in dramatic fashion. According to the Bible, a journey here made by a man, a heavily-pregnant woman and a donkey changed the world in an instant. Around two millennia on, their story still impacts on the lives of hundreds of millions of people”. The diary can be read in full on the BBC website here .

BBC's Aleem Maqboul walks toward Bethlehem with donkey

He also wrote: “Much of the trip was a reminder that, however obvious this sounds, people in a conflict zone are as three-dimensional as those anywhere else. There were, of course, sad indications of the tensions here. There was the silence of hundreds of people as they buried a 22-year-old militant in the village of Yamoon, after an Israeli army raid”. [n.b. – Maqboul wrote on this killing on 16 December, a day after he started his trip, saying: “On the news of one such raid, on a village close to the border crossing, I decided to take a detour. The raid was over, and the army had gone. They had killed a 22-year-old man, Jihad Nawahda. We were told he was a local leader of the Islamic Jihad militant group and had been wanted by the Israeli army for some time. Funeral prayers had already been carried out, and by the time I arrived, hundreds of men escorted the body to the cemetery for immediate burial, in accordance with Muslim tradition. A few black and yellow Islamic Jihad flags were carried in silence by the mourners”. This killing provoked a large increase in the number of “projectiles” being fired from Gaza onto Israeli territory in the vicinity of the northern Gaza strip. This entry in Maqboul’s trip diary can be found on this page.]

His final trip diary entry continued: “A sense of how far apart the worlds of Jewish settlers and Palestinian villagers were, how little interaction there was between the two and how entrenched their views are. And then there was the military checkpoint that greets visitors entering Bethlehem. But people along the way did speak of hope – though not necessarily expectation – that things would get better one day”.

BBC's Aleem Maqboul has company as he walks near Nablus

However, on 23 December, Maqboul passed through Ramallah and then Jerusalem on his way, and noted: “Ramallah is the city in which I have lived for more than a year-and-a-half. Amid all the chaos and conflict in other parts of the Palestinian Territories, Ramallah tries hard to cocoon itself. Three Palestinian refugee camps are incorporated into the city; Jewish settlements expand on the hills around it; access to Jerusalem, Bethlehem, or parts of the northern West Bank has become difficult – yet the building work on new apartment blocks all over Ramallah points to the beginnings of economic progress. Socially too, the city has tried to remain resilient. An evening out in any number of fancy restaurants or bars hypnotises the wealthiest of Ramallah’s residents into thinking that all is well in the world. Many Palestinians here, outwardly at least, seem determined not to concern themselves even with the dire humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, for example. Underneath, most acknowledge that Ramallah’s future is still incredibly fragile. Approaching the Kalandia checkpoint, through which I needed to pass continue my journey, I noticed a large, new piece of graffiti on the familiar grey … I negotiated the queues, turnstiles and x-ray machines with few hold-ups, and headed through the crossing towards the centre of Jerusalem. I was turned back at a subsequent, smaller, checkpoint [n.b., we know which one that was — the infamous “ar-Ram” checkpoint at Dahiet al-Bariid, and for more details and descriptions see our other posts on this blog], but it was a minor inconvenience as I knew a route around it…”

I don’t know what happened to the comments that I read on the site at an earlier stage of Maqboul’s journey …

Problems entering Bethlehem through Checkpoint 300 – the Rachel's Tomb crossing.

I went to Bethlehem Thursday afternoon, and was held at the checkpoint for TWO HOURS waiting to get INTO the West Bank.

Bethlehem - Checkpoint 300 - the main crossing - photo by the Rev. Julie Rowe

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) liaison office in Tel Aviv, which is supposed to coordinate and facilitate access for foreign press, spent all that time negotiating with the Israeli Border police in order to enable my entry.

They did so the previous time I went to Bethlehem, when I was held one-and-a-half hours while trying to get INTO Bethlehem. Then, the IDF liaison office suggested that the next time I go to Bethlehem, I coordinate with them, so this would not happen again.

So, I decided it might be wise to take this advice, and I called and coordinated with the IDF in Tel Aviv, giving them my Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) card number, and my U.S. passport number as well.

The same Border Police figures were on duty this Thursday as the last time. I remembered them, and they remembered me.

You cannot pass.

What!?

“Did you get in the last time?”, the man at the gate asked. “Really? You did? I can’t believe it”:

Yes, I replied, I got in the last time, and I am going to get in this time as well.

Bethlehem - Checkpoint 300 - the main crossing - photo by the Rev. Julie Rowe

What was the issue?

It was never explained to me the last time, though an Italian priest with the Franciscan order of the Roman Catholic Church said it was because I was driving a rental car, which the Border Police asserted — completely wrongly, in smug ignorance — did not have insurance to travel to Bethlehem.

As a matter of fact, I have gone with this same rental car at least thirty times into Bethlehem, not to mention the hundreds or perhaps now thousands of times I have been to Ramallah and areas of the West Bank nearer my home. It is leased from one of the East Jerusalem car rental companies who provide, for people like me, cars with two separate insurance policies — one effective in Israel, and one that is in effect for the West Bank.

By contrast, the Israeli car rental companies — including Eldan, Avis, Hertz, and Shlomo Sixt, among others — make their customers sign waivers saying they are aware they are forbidden to drive their cars in the West Bank.

I explained this to olive-green-uniformed types — one, a young woman with a very big black automatic weapon — who were my first interlocutors, and then to several other Police officials in light blue shirts and dark blue trousers.

You don’t understand, the young woman in an olive green uniform with a big black automatic weapon told me, (patronizingly, it must be said): this car can get stolen in Bethlehem.

(Many of these border police officers and even the IDF who operate at other checkpoints have never been on the other side of their checkpoints, and they imagine them as a place of total terror and chaos, not as places where ordinary human beings not too unlike themselves are trying, just trying, to live.)

The Border Police spokesman, Moshe Pinchee — who I had tried to call earlier, at the suggestion of the IDF liaison officer in Tel Aviv, but who told me he was in a meeting and would call me back, but whe didn’t — spoke over my phone to the blue-shirted types at the checkpoint, and then said to me that I got in the last time despite the regulation concerning rental cars, which he said he was previously unaware of. He, the Border Police official in charge of facilitating crossing at Border Police-controlled checkpoints, was unaware of a regulation? What kind of regulation is that?

Are you acting as an agent for the Israeli car rental companies, I asked?

If this is really a regulation, as you are saying, it should be publicly known clearly in advance, accessible for everyone to know well in advance.

It should be painted on a billboard at the checkpoint (say, in English, Arabic and Hebrew – which were all official languages during the British Mandate in Palestine, and English is still the common language here, and is used during all the peace negotiations.)

It could also be put on the internet (in the same languages). It could be printed in brochures and given to car rental companies, and to the Foreign Press Association.

A regulation is not something just pulled out of a hat when somebody pulls up at the head of a long line of hot and nervous people at a checkpoint.

The owner of the car rental company said he would immediately fax the West Bank car insurance certificate to them, if they provided me a fax number. I asked the Border Police at the Bethlehem Checkpoint for a fax number — one, I said, for a fax machine which they would be watching, not an unattended fax machine where the fax would just come in and lie there for hours while I baked outside in the afternoon heat and the burning sun.

Finally, they gave me a fax number. The fax came in. The blue-shirted types came out and discussed the paper.

So, I said, you have the fax. Yes, they replied, but it’s in Arabic, and we can’t understand it.

Arabic is an official language of the State of Israel, I replied. And, I added, you didn’t expect a car insurance certificate for the West Bank to be in Chinese, or even in Hebrew, did you? (I later asked them to give me the fax, and then I saw that while the form itself was in Arabic, all the information — the type of car, year, plate number, date of validity of the insurance, etc. — was entirely in ENGLISH!)

Arabic may be an official language, the IDF liaison officer told me, but people are only required to speak their own language.

What is the West Bank?, said the girl in the olive green uniform with the big black automatic weapon.
What do you mean by the West Bank?, she insisted, in that flat tone of people who don’t speak English very well.

That’s when I lost it. Was her English so deficient? Or, was she making an ideological argument, because she preferred to hear the politically-laden terms used by the religous nationalist settler movement, who call it Judea and Samaria?

What is the West Bank?!?!?!!!!! I began to speak loudly What is this checkpoint??? What is this Wall??? At least we can agree that that, over there, on the other side, is the West Bank!!!!

Then, one of the blue-shirted types with epaulettes with three stars said: She is shouting, she cannot enter.

Pull your car over there (in the full exposure of the sun), he said. This is an order.

I am not going to wait in the hot sun, I said. If you want me to wait, you should bring me some water. I would also like some tea, with sugar.

The three-starred officer laughed, then stopped abruptly. I think you are serious, he said.

I am serious, I said, and you have no respect for people. You have absolutely no respect.

As I drove off looking for a shady spot, I passed an unmarked Border Police post about 150 meters ahead of the checkpoint, where two olive green jeeps were parked. I got a quick glimpse, while driving past, through the door of a corrugated tin walled and roofed room, of three young Palestinian men standing inside, detained, in the full blistering heat.

An hour later, the IDF liaison officer in Tel Aviv said, this is ridiculous. This is more than that, it is stupid.

Another half hour later, he said the order had been given to let me pass. Go to the gate.

I went to the gate, and the guy inside waved his hand at me to go back. “Who said you could go in?”, he asked. The IDF, I replied. Who? he asked, apparently puzzled. THe Israeli Defense Forces. He still looked puzzled. The Army. No flicker of comprehensive. Tsahal, I said, finally. Oh, he said, lifting his eyebrows in surprise.

One of the blue-shirted types, a junior one, who had earlier convinced the Border Police Spokesman that there was actually some kind of regulation prohibiting the entry of rental cars into Bethlehem, came and took my phone. He snapped to attention, and called the Border Police commander at the checkpoint — the one with the three stars on his epaulettes, the one who said I could not enter Bethlehem because I was shouting, the one who told me if I had a complaint I could write about him, and pointed to his nameplate (written only in Hebrew), and the one who told me his name was Hagai Cohen.

It was immediately decided that I could enter, after they noted the license plate number of my car (as they had done the last time, about a month ago…)

The next time, as friends subsequently suggested, I will simply avoid this checkpoint, and go in another way — longer, but much easier.

And this is supposed to be security! It is sometimes also described, to the press, as customer service offered by the checkpoints to the Palestinian population.

Bethlehem - Checkpoint 300 - the main crossing - photo by the Rev. Julie Rowe