Politics

How Israel Kicked a Quarter of a Million Palestinians out of Gaza and West Bank

Israel stripped more than 100,000 residents of Gaza and some 140,000 residents of the West Bank of their residency rights during the 27 years between its conquest of the territories in 1967 and the establishment of the Palestinian Authority in 1994, the Haaretz newspaper has revealed.

As a result, close to 250,000 Palestinians who left the territories were barred from ever returning. Many of those prevented from returning were students or young professionals, working aboard to support their families.

Given that Gaza’s population has a natural growth rate of 3.3 percent a year, its population today would be more than 10 percent higher, had Israel not followed a policy of revoking residency rights from anyone who left the area for an extended period of time. The West Bank’s population growth rate is 3 percent.

The data on Gaza residency rights was released by the Defense Ministry’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories this week. In its letter, COGAT said that 44,730 Gazans lost their residency rights because they were absent from the territory for seven years or more; 54,730 because they did not respond to the 1981 census; and 7,249 because they didn’t respond to the 1988 census.

It added that 15,000 of those deprived of residency are now aged 90 or older.

In May 2011, Haaretz obtained the figures on West Bank residents who were stripped of their residency rights. The report noted that Israel had, for years, employed a secret procedure to do so.

Palestinians who went abroad were required to leave their identity card at the border crossing. Unlike those from Gaza, who were allowed to leave for seven years, these Palestinians received a special permit valid for three years. The permit could be renewed three times, each time for one year.

But any Palestinian who failed to return within six months after his permit expired would be stripped of his residency with no prior notice.

Today, a similar procedure is applied to East Jerusalem residents: A Palestinian who lives abroad for seven years or more loses his right to return to the city.

Since many of those who lost their residency rights from 1967 to 1994 in both Gaza and the West Bank were students or young professionals, their descendants today presumably number in the hundreds of thousands.

Among the more prominent West Bank residents who have been barred from returning are the brothers of the Palestinian Authority’s chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat, who went abroad to study and subsequently lost their residency. They now live in California.

Once again, the hypocrisy of the Jewish Supremacists is staggering: imagine the US government revoking the residency rights of American Jews who go to Israel and don’t return within a certain time period!  There would be outrage and condemnation—but the Zionist state can behave in such a manner with impunity, because their co-religionists control the US government and the mass media.