Border security and a visa policy. There isn’t a single sovereign state in the world that doesn’t have both. For full report of Honest Reporting see here.
The United Kingdom certainly does — a robust one, no
less. For Palestinians, a visa is
mandatory to enter the UK, whether for tourism, family visits,
business, or study — short stay or long.
In addition to a visa, Palestinians must present a
valid passport, proof of accommodation (hotel booking or invitation from a
local host), evidence of financial means (bank statements, employer letter,
etc.), and a return or onward travel ticket. Processing is time-consuming,
often expensive, and far from guaranteed.
The irony of this, however, has been lost on British
Labour MPs Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang, who apparently believed their
parliamentary status placed them above the entry requirements enforced on
ordinary visitors when they arrived in Israel last week.
Upon landing at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport and
telling border authorities they were on a “parliamentary delegation to visit
humanitarian aid projects in the West Bank,” they were found to have
misrepresented the nature of their visit, denied entry, and promptly deported —
just like anyone else who flouts standard entry procedures.
The two MPs were, in fact, on a trip arranged by
Caabu — the Council for Arab-British Understanding — a lobby group that
specialises in escorting British parliamentarians on carefully choreographed
“fact-finding” tours of the West Bank. According to NGO Monitor, Caabu’s stated aim is to “counter the Israel lobby”
in British politics — a mission it advances by promoting inflammatory,
evidence-free accusations of “ethnic cleansing” and “apartheid,” under the
guise of educational outreach.
For Mohamed, though, this wasn’t a matter of border
policy, as she told the House of Commons,
but an act of “control and censorship” — part of a broader effort, she claimed,
to suppress those trying to “expose” Israel. She went further still, casting
her routine deportation as political repression and invoking the familiar
antisemitic dog whistle: “No state, however powerful, should be beyond
criticism.”
One must assume, then, that Mohamed also views the
UK’s visa system — which requires Palestinians to navigate layers of
bureaucracy and reserves the right to deny them entry — as an example of a
state’s unrestrained power.
Mohamed and Yang landed in Israel at 2:30 p.m. on
Saturday, April 5, on a flight from Luton, accompanied by two aides. During
questioning, the two MPs — both vocal supporters of BDS — claimed they were
part of an official parliamentary delegation. That claim was reportedly untrue:
no Israeli authority had received notification of such a delegation, nor had
any approval been granted, according to Israel’s Interior Ministry.
Interior Minister Moshe Arbel denied entry to all
four individuals “in accordance with the law,” noting their intent to cause
harm to the state.
The UK’s own Foreign Office, it’s worth noting,
explicitly states that foreign nationals can
legally be denied entry to Israel if they’ve publicly called for a boycott or
belong to an organization that has. It’s right there on the government’s
website — advice Mohamed and Yang might have reviewed before confirming their
airline tickets.
But their apparent disbelief that Israel would
actually enforce its own laws has been matched, headline for headline, by the
British media’s hyperventilation over the supposed diplomatic scandal.
Sky
News has breathlessly tracked every twist of the saga, with
headlines about the “furious
row” over the Labour MPs’ denied entry and helpful explainers
outlining “what the MPs said about the war in Gaza”
— just in case anyone was still wondering why they might not be welcomed with
open arms.
The
Guardian is doing its best to amplify the manufactured
indignation, leading its coverage with Foreign Secretary David Lammy’s
condemnation of Israel’s decision as “unacceptable,
counterproductive, and deeply concerning.”
Curiously, it failed to mention Lammy’s own support,
back in 2008, for banning Israeli MPs from entering the UK — a rather pertinent
omission.
So while the BBC blares
about how “astounded” these MPs are, and The
Independent frets about the “escalating diplomatic row,”
let’s take a moment to remind the media — and our stunned British lawmakers —
of a basic principle:
It’s called the law, and it applies to everyone. And
as the Brits themselves might put it, this is nothing more than a storm in a
teacup.
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