[NYTr] Political Nightmare: US Family Separated, Declared "Palestinian" by Israel
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Sep 10 16:37:29 EDT 2007
sent by mart
[U.S. family on vacation declared "Palestinians" by Israel -
7 children separated from parents and forced to stay behind
Absolutely outragous criminal behavour on the part of both Isreal and
of the U.S. State Department! Despite the fact that the Yacoub
familly are all U.S citizens, all carried U.S. passports and the 7
children declared to be 'Palestinians' and refused permission to leave
by Isreal were all born in the U.S., the U.S. State Department says -
quote: "there is little we can do"! - mart ]
The Ledger (Lakeland, Fla) - Sep 6, 2007
http://www.theledger.com/article/20070906/NEWS/709060547/1039
political nightmare
Lakeland Family Separated By Rules at Airport in Israel
7 children, declared Palestinians, must stay.
By SCOTT WHEELER
The Ledger
LAKELAND--The summer wasn't supposed to end like this for the family of
Steve and Wedad Yacoub.
The Lakeland family was separated on Aug. 18 at an Israeli airport as
they attempted to return home from a summer visiting relatives in
Palestine.
Although the Yacoubs are naturalized U.S. citizens and all their
children were born in America, Israeli officials told them they had
been designated Palestinian citizens.
They would not allow Wedad Yacoub and 10 of her children to board the
flight.
She was forced to choose between remaining in Palestine with the
children or return with the three youngest, leaving the other seven
behind.
"I begged them. I was crying, the kids were crying. I was very angry,"
Wedad Yacoub said Wednesday.
Finally, after arranging for the older children to be picked up by
relatives and hoping they would follow in a few days, she flew home
with her children, ages 10, 5 and 3.
The others, ranging in age from 11 to 22, were driven back to their
grandmother's home in Ramallah, where they remain caught in a
bureaucratic and political tangle. The family says the U.S. State
Department has told them there is little they can do.
At a news conference Wednesday in Tampa, officials with the Council on
American-Islamic Relations, a civil-rights group, said the Yacoubs have
only two options: continue to press U.S. government officials to
persuade Israel to allow the children to leave, or to send them home
through Amman, Jordan, a lengthy and expensive process.
Ahmed Bedier, executive director of the council's Tampa chapter, said
Continental Airlines has rebooked reservations for the children today
at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, but that is where they were denied
permission to return, and the family is not hopeful they will be
allowed to depart.
"They hate it so much. They are crying on the phone every day, 'I want
to come back,'" said Wedad Yacoub.
The Yacoub family is well-known in North Lakeland, where four children
graduated from Lake Gibson High School and two currently are enrolled
there. Another two are enrolled at Lake Gibson Middle School.
"They're good kids, excellent students, all honors-level," said Ralph
Gilchrest, principal of Lake Gibson High.
"They're very easy to get along with. They follow the rules, they're
mannerly and involved with their school."
Ramy Yacoub, 18, graduated from Lake Gibson in May. He was on the
school's wrestling team.
A teammate, Brent Jorge, said he and Ramy would go fishing and see
movies together. He said he thought it was "ridiculous" his friend had
not been allowed to come home.
"He's American to everyone here. His skin is different, but he's just
like everyone else," Jorge said.
Steve Yacoub, the children's father, owns a convenience store in
Lakeland. He is a native of Palestine, but has been an American citizen
for about 30 years.
As they have each summer for the past four years, in June the Yacoub
family traveled to Palestine to visit relatives. They were admitted
entry into Palestine through Israel on three-month visas, said Wedad
Yacoub. This year, the visit included weddings. Twin brothers Ibrahim
and Yacoub Yacoub, 22, got married in Ramallah in July.
There was a hint of problems to come when Steve Yacoub, traveling
separately, was denied entry. He was forced to return to the United
States and enter the Palestinian territory through Jordan.
The Yacoub's eldest child, a daughter, Palestine Yacoub, who is
pregnant, was also turned away and chose not to make the trip.
On Aug. 18, as they tried to return home, Israeli security officials
told the children their father's Palestinian heritage disqualified them
from traveling as American citizens, Wedad Yacoub said.
A new rule was adopted by Israel in March, stating that citizens of
other countries who are of Palestinian heritage may be designated as
Palestinian residents and forced to leave the country through Jordan,
even if they possess round-trip airline tickets and, as in the Yacoubs'
case, U.S. passports. For the Yacoubs, that means an 18-hour wait at a
border checkpoint, forfeiting their return-trip tickets and buying new
tickets at a cost of about $16,000.
Bedier, of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said the family
was told the problem could be solved if they signed a paper renouncing
their Palestinian heritage and all future intention to become
Palestinian citizens.
The Yacoubs immediately contacted U.S. State Department officials, who
were sympathetic, but told the family it was Israeli policy.
Bedier said his organization had sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice on Aug. 29, urging her intervention.
"Our organization has received a rise in complaints over the summer
from folks traveling in the West Bank as far as unfair treatment by the
Israeli authorities, either on their way in or out. ... We find that
this treatment is unacceptable, that no American citizen should be
subjected to this kind of humiliation. We're puzzled by the double
standard in the treatment," he said.
Ariel Roman, director of media affairs for the Israeli Consulate
General in Miami, said his office was awaiting information from the
Israeli government but offices there were closed for the night.
Keith Rupp, a spokesman for U.S. Rep. Adam Putnam, R-Bartow, who has
been working with the Yacoub family, said Wednesday that according to
information from the State Department, the Israelis were holding fast
to their policy, which they ascribed to "rising violence" in the
Palestinian territory.
"We're not quite sure how they arrived at this decision. ... Our goal
is to see an American family reunited," he said.
Rupp said the State Department posted a notice to travelers on its Web
site about the new policy, then issued an enhanced warning in July, but
the Yacoubs said they had no hint the rules had changed and had never
encountered difficulty traveling to Palestine before.
The Yacoubs said they will not wait much longer to find a way to get
their children home.
"I can't wait. I need my kids back," said Steve Yacoub Wednesday.
"They're missing school, they're missing everything."
[ Ledger correspondent Sarah Stegall contributed to this report. Cary
McMullen can be reached at cary.mcmullen at theledger.com or 863-802-7509.
His blog, Scriptorium: A Religion Panorama, can be read at
religion.theledger.com. (no URL supplied by the Ledger -NYTr) ]
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