From the BBC:
“Israel bars Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib from visiting”
Israel is blocking two US
Democratic lawmakers, who are prominent critics of the Israeli government, from
visiting. Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib were due to visit the occupied West Bank
and East Jerusalem next week. Both have supported the boycott movement against
Israel, but Israeli law allows supporters of the campaign to be banned from
visiting. President Trump earlier tweeted it would show "great
weakness" if the pair were allowed entry. Ms Omar described Israel's move as "an
insult to democratic values and a chilling response to a visit by government
officials from an allied nation". Earlier on Thursday, Mr Trump had taken
to Twitter to urge that the two lawmakers be blocked from visiting, adding that
"they hate Israel & all Jewish people, & there is nothing that can
be said or done to change their minds". Ms Omar and Ms Tlaib have both
been criticised for their stance on Israel - but have denied charges of being
anti-Semitic.
Why have they been banned?
Israeli law blocks entrance visas
to any foreigner who calls for any type of boycott that targets Israel - either
economic, cultural or academic. The law attempts to suppress the "boycott,
divest, sanction" movement, which has drawn growing support across Europe
and the US. Israeli officials had earlier said they would make an exception for
the elected US officials, before backtracking. According to US media, their
trip was meant to begin on Sunday, and would include a stop at one of the most
sensitive sites in the region - a hilltop plateau in Jerusalem known to Jews as
the Temple Mount and Muslims as Haram al-Sharif. They also planned to visit Israeli and
Palestinian peace activists and travel to Jerusalem and the West Bank cities of
Bethlehem, Ramallah and Hebron. The trip to the West Bank was planned by
Miftah, an organisation headed by Palestinian peace negotiator Hanan Ashrawi. Ms
Tlaib was planning to stay for two extra days to visit her grandmother, who
lives in a Palestinian village.
Who are they?
President Trump, who has a close
relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has frequently
feuded with the lawmakers and in remarks widely condemned as racist, told them
to "go back" to the countries that their families were from. Ms
Tlaib, a Palestinian American, was born in Michigan, and Ms Omar is from
Minnesota but was born in Somalia. After
the Democratic-led House of Representatives voted against the boycott against
Israel movement in July, Ms Tlaib criticised the country as "racist".
"I can't stand by and watch this attack on our freedom of speech and the
right to boycott the racist policies of the government and the state of
Israel," she said. The House also voted to condemn hate speech in a move
directed at Ms Omar for her criticism of US support for Israel. "It's all
about the Benjamins baby," Ms Omar had tweeted in a reference to the US
$100 note, leading to allegations that she was using a negative stereotype for
Jews. She later apologised, and said the tweet was meant to criticise
lobbyists, not Jews. She also thanked "Jewish allies and colleagues who
are educating me on the painful history of anti-Semitic tropes".
What has Israel said?
A statement from the Israeli
Interior Ministry confirming the ban said it was "inconceivable that those
who wish to harm the state of Israel while visiting would be granted
entry". But only last month Israeli
Ambassador Ron Dermer said the two Democrats would be permitted to visit
"out of respect for the US Congress and the great alliance between Israel
and America". In a statement on Thursday, Mr Netanyahu said "there is
no country in the world that respects the US and the American Congress more
than Israel." "However, the
itinerary showed that the congresswomen's sole intention was to harm
Israel."
What's the reaction?
The US ambassador to Israel said
in a statement that the US "supports and respects the decision of the
Government of Israel to deny entry". Israel "has every right to
protect its borders against those activists in the same manner as it would bar
entrants with more conventional weapons," wrote Ambassador David Friedman.
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), said in a tweet while
they disagree with the lawmakers' support for the boycott movement against
Israel, they also believe "every member of Congress should be able to
visit and experience our democratic ally Israel firsthand". It was a
sentiment echoed by Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who said that while he disagreed
with the women, "denying them entry into Israel is a mistake. Being
blocked is what they really hoped for all along in order to bolster their
attacks against the Jewish state."
The strategy behind Trump's
condemnation of Ilhan Omar
New Jersey Democrat Congressman
Tom Malinowski called the decision "disrespectful to Congress" and
said during a cross-party congressional trip to Israel last week officials had
assured them their colleagues would be allowed to visit. "First he tells
Congresswoman Tlaib to 'go back' to 'her' country, and then he tells that
country not to let her in," he tweeted, referring to Mr Trump's comments. Last
month, Rashida Tlaib said Mr Trump was "the biggest bully I've ever had to
deal with" Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, said
"this sad reversal is deeply disappointing". She called Israel's
denial "a sign of weakness" and said President Trump's comments
"a sign of ignorance and disrespect".
Has this happened before?
The ban on two foreign
dignitaries is rare but not unprecedented. Makarim Wibisono, a UN special
rapporteur on human rights, was denied entry in 2015 after Israel said his
mandate was anti-Israel. Fouad Ahmad Assadi of Spain's Socialist Party, was
barred from entering Israel last month because he was deemed a threat to
national security. The Lebanese-born
politician travelled there to participate in the annual Socialist International
conference in Tel Aviv and Ramallah - but he was denied entry at Ben Gurion Airport.
However, no members of US Congress have been blocked before now. Israel often
hosts congressional delegations. Earlier this month, 41 Democrats and 31
Republicans attended a visit sponsored by the AIPAC lobby group.
^ These two Congresswomen support BDS and that is why they were banned from Israel. I know BDS sounds like a gastrointestinal problem, but it is an Anti-Semitic group that promotes a boycott of Israel and even has called for Israel to not exist as a nation. BDS has been condemned and even banned: by Canada, France, Germany, the UK, and 27 US States and the US House of Representatives (which even the ACLU supported.) These politicians deserve to be banned from Israel because of their anti-Israeli comments and actions that help spread anti-Jewish hostility around the world. Anti-Semitism and violence against Jews is increasing around the world thanks to people like these two women. Imagine if an Israeli politician called for a boycott of the United States and said that the US had no right to exist and then that politician tried to enter the US and was banned. That is what is happening here. Israel is keeping out racists from their country who call for harm to be done against the Israeli people. They can’t expect to boycott Israel and not have Israel ban them. It would be better if Trump stayed out of all of this though. It is Israel’s decision - and a right decision at that. ^
^ These two Congresswomen support BDS and that is why they were banned from Israel. I know BDS sounds like a gastrointestinal problem, but it is an Anti-Semitic group that promotes a boycott of Israel and even has called for Israel to not exist as a nation. BDS has been condemned and even banned: by Canada, France, Germany, the UK, and 27 US States and the US House of Representatives (which even the ACLU supported.) These politicians deserve to be banned from Israel because of their anti-Israeli comments and actions that help spread anti-Jewish hostility around the world. Anti-Semitism and violence against Jews is increasing around the world thanks to people like these two women. Imagine if an Israeli politician called for a boycott of the United States and said that the US had no right to exist and then that politician tried to enter the US and was banned. That is what is happening here. Israel is keeping out racists from their country who call for harm to be done against the Israeli people. They can’t expect to boycott Israel and not have Israel ban them. It would be better if Trump stayed out of all of this though. It is Israel’s decision - and a right decision at that. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-49363041
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