Residency and Family
Separation
THE ISRAELI INFORMATION CENTER FOR
IN THE OCCUPIED TERRITORIES
 

23.9.07: Tomorrow High Court will hear petition against Israel's policy of dividing families in the West Bank

Tomorrow, 24 September, the High Court of Justice will hear four petitions filed by HaMoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual on behalf of families from the West Bank contending infringement of their right to family life. The court's decision will determine the outcome of forty-three other petitions that HaMoked has filed on this issue. All of the cases involved families in which one of the spouses is a resident of the West Bank or Gaza Strip and the other is a foreigner who does not have formal status in the area. Because of the importance of the issue, eight other human rights joined as petitioners.


Video testimonies of women from the former USSR married to residents of the Territories

Since the beginning of the second intifada, Israel has frozen family unification in cases in which one of the spouses is a foreign resident. In addition, Israel has ceased issuing visitor's permits, which enabled families to live together legally in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

As a result of the freeze policy, tens of thousands of foreign spouses of Palestinians, mostly women, have faced a cruel choice: leave the Occupied Territories and not be allowed to return to their spouses and children, or stay illegally, without legal status and under constant threat of deportation, making them prisoners in their own villages and homes.


Video testimonies of a Jordanian citizen married to a resident of the Territories

 
Background
Creation of the problem
Israel's position
Implementation
International law
East Jerusalem
1998-2000 statistics
Related updates
Related testimonies
Related publications
   
The petition, at Hamoked website, PDF
B'Tslem and Hamoked report: "Perpetual Limbo"