Palestinian Displacement: a Case Apart?

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Palestinian Displacement: a Case Apart? issue 26 August 2006 Palestinian displacement: a case apart? Published by the Refugee Studies Centre in association with the Norwegian Refugee Council. Forced Migration Review Corinne Owen from Forced Migration Review provides a forum for the regular exchange of practical the experience, information and ideas between researchers, refugees and internally editors displaced people, and those who work with them. It is published in English, This issue of FMR was planned long before the humanitarian crisis which has Spanish, Arabic and French by the Refugee displaced 20% of the Lebanese population. Articles look beyond the current events Studies Centre, University of Oxford. to what most international observers regard as the root causes of conflict and displacement in the Middle East. The protracted nature of the displacement, the Editors complexity of the means used to dispossess Palestinians and the apparent double Marion Couldrey & Dr Tim Morris standards of the international community do indeed make this a case apart. From high points in the West Bank it is possible to see across Israel/Palestine Editorial Assistant – from the Dead Sea to the Mediterranean. The articles in this issue discuss how Musab Hayatli displacement from this tiny sliver of land has had and continues to have far-reaching global consequences. The great majority of the seven million Palestinian refugees still Assistant live within 100km of the borders of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip where Sharon Ellis their homes of origin are located. They are refugees because Israel – committed to a permanent Jewish majority and granting citizenship to any member of the Jewish diaspora – denies Palestinians their basic human right to return to their homes of Forced Migration Review origin. Palestinians may be the world’s largest refugee population, yet hardly any of Refugee Studies Centre them register on the global refugee tally kept by UNHCR as their initial displacement Department of International Development predates the 1951 Geneva Convention and the establishment of the refugee agency. 3 Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3TB, UK Email: [email protected] The fact that the Palestinian refugee crisis continues to fester represents perhaps Tel/fax: +44 (0)1865 280700 the gravest failure of the UN since its foundation. The international community Skype: fmreview has not exerted sufficient political will to advance durable solutions consistent with international law and Security Council resolutions requiring Israel to withdraw Copyright and disclaimer from occupied Palestinian territory. Durable solutions for displaced Palestinians Opinions in FMR do not necessarily reflect the have been discussed without reference to the legal norms applied in other refugee views of the Editors or the Refugee Studies Centre cases. Refugee rights, entitlements to compensation or restitution and the rights or the Norwegian Refugee Council. Any FMR print to protection of those Palestinians living under continued military occupation were or online material may be freely reproduced, not central to the now-moribund Oslo peace process – nor are they part of the provided that acknowledgement is given to the source and, where possible, the FMR URL and/or subsequent US-sponsored ‘Performance-Based Roadmap to a Permanent Two- the article-specific URL. We welcome comments State Solution’. In the absence of progress towards a durable solution, creeping on the content and layout of FMR – please email, annexation continues unchecked. Upon completion of Israel’s Wall, Palestinians in write or use the form on our homepage. the West Bank and Gaza Strip will be restricted to a series of non-contiguous enclaves which constitute an eighth of the area of historic Palestine. Despite pro-democracy Website rhetoric, Western response to the internationally-validated Palestinian legislative www.fmreview.org elections in January 2006 has sparked a politically-induced crisis and crippled the Palestinian economy. Ordinary Palestinians are suffering as donors freeze funding Designed by required to maintain humanitarian assistance and development programmes. Art24 (www.art-24.co.uk) It has been considerably harder than usual to raise funds for this FMR – even before the Lebanon emergency. We are therefore all the more grateful for financial Printed by support from the A M Qattan Foundation, Interpal, Jews for Justice for Palestinians, Save the Children (UK), the Sir Joseph Hotung Programme on Lazergraphic (PVT) Ltd, Sri Lanka Law, Human Rights and Peace Building in the Middle East, the Sultan of Oman and the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) . ISSN 1460-9819 We owe a debt of gratitude to all the authors, especially those who found time to Front cover photo: write for us and consider our editing suggestions whilst responding to humanitarian crises in Gaza and Lebanon. This issue – and the funding which has enabled us to The eight-metre-high concrete Wall surrounds the West Bank town of Qalqilya. get this copy to you – would not have been possible without assistance from Jennifer Paul Jeffrey/ACT International Loewenstein, Abbas Shiblak, Angela Godfrey-Goldstein and Elizabeth Cabal. The theme of the next issue of FMR – to be published in English in November Free CD-ROM: – will be ‘Sexual violence in conflict and beyond’. The April 2007 issue will include a feature section on ‘Strengthening Southern protection and assistance capacity’. Regular readers of FMR See www.fmreview.org/forthcoming.htm. We would welcome articles on Lebanon. will receive, with this issue, a Guide to International Human Rights Some of you may be receiving FMR for the first time. We publish in English, Arabic, Mechanisms for IDPs and their Advocates, Spanish and French. If you would like to receive future issues – or to receive more courtesy of the Brookings-Bern Project on copies – please contact us (using details opposite or the form on the back cover). Internal Displacement. For more copies, email [email protected] With our best wishes Marion Couldrey and Tim Morris Editors, Forced Migration Review contents Civil society responds to protection gap Palestinian displacement by Vivienne Jackson ....................................................................... 42 Lebanon: civilians pay the price European aid to vulnerable Palestinians Tomas C Archer ................................................................................ 4 by Daniela Cavini ............................................................................44 Who are Palestinian refugees? Reparations for Palestinian refugees by Terry M Rempel ............................................................................ 5 by Lena El-Malak ............................................................................ 46 Stateless Palestinians The politics of Palestinian refugee participation by Abbas Shiblak ............................................................................. 8 by Juliette Abu-Iyun and Nora Lester Murad ................................ 47 UNRWA: assisting Palestine refugees in a Negotiating checkpoints in Palestine challenging environment by Sheerin Al Araj ........................................................................... 49 by Greta Gunnarsdóttir .................................................................. 10 Policing thought on Palestine ..................................................... 50 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon What future for young Palestinians in Jordan? by Sherif Elsayed-Ali .......................................................................13 by Jason Hart .................................................................................. 51 No freedom, no future: undocumented Palestinian refugees in Lebanon by Cynthia Petrigh ..........................................................................15 General articles Immobile Palestinians: ongoing plight of Gazans in Jordan Clarifying local integration by Oroub el Abed ............................................................................ 17 by Sarah Meyer ............................................................................... 52 Is Gaza still occupied territory? UNHCR’s observations to the High-Level Dialogue by Iain Scobbie ...............................................................................18 on International Migration and Development ........................... 53 Can Palestinian refugees in Iraq find protection? Mediterranean migration: by Gabriela Wengert and Michelle Alfaro ..................................... 19 the need for a comprehensive response by Erika Feller .................................................................................54 Territorial fragmentation of the West Bank by David Shearer ............................................................................ 22 The false panacea of offshore deterrence by James C Hathaway .................................................................... 56 Identity and movement control in the OPT by Jennifer Loewenstein ................................................................ 24 Rule of law in Sudan’s Three Areas by Sebastien Gouraud ................................................................... 58 ‘Quiet transfer’ in East Jerusalem nears completion by Elodie Guego .............................................................................. 26 Right to education in South Darfur by Katherine Reid ........................................................................... 60 The message of the bulldozers by Jeff Halper
Recommended publications
  • Survey of Palestinian Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons 2010 - 2012 Volume VII
    BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights is an independent, community-based non- This edition of the Survey of Palestinian Survey of Palestinian Refugees and profit organization mandated to defend Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons BADIL Internally Displaced Persons 2010-2012 and promote the rights of Palestinian (Volume VII) focuses on Palestinian Vol VII 2010-2012 refugees and Internally Displaced Persons Survey of refugees and IDPs. Our vision, mission, 124 Pages, 30 c.m. (IDPs) in the period between 2010 and ISSN: 1728-1679 programs and relationships are defined 2012. Statistical data and estimates of the by our Palestinian identity and the size of this population have been updated Palestinian Refugees principles of international law, in in accordance with figures as of the end Editor: Nidal al-Azza particular international human rights of 2011. This edition includes for the first law. We seek to advance the individual time an opinion poll surveying Palestinian Editorial Team: Amjad Alqasis, Simon and collective rights of the Palestinian refugees regarding specific humanitarian and Randles, Manar Makhoul, Thayer Hastings, services they receive in the refugee Noura Erakat people on this basis. camps. Demographic Statistics: Mustafa Khawaja BADIL Resource Center was established The need to overview and contextualize in January 1998. BADIL is registered Palestinian refugees and (IDPs) - 64 Internally Displaced Persons Layout & Design: Atallah Salem with the Palestinan Authority and years since the Palestinian Nakba Printing: Al-Ayyam Printing, Press, (Catastrophe) and 45 years since Israel’s legally owned by the refugee community Publishing and Distribution Conmpany represented by a General Assembly belligerent occupation of the West Bank, including eastern Jerusalem, and the 2010 - 2012 composed of activists in Palestinian Gaza Strip - is derived from the necessity national institutions and refugee to set the foundations for a human rights- community organizations.
    [Show full text]
  • Israeli Human Rights Violations and Hamas Support Ii Preface
    IIssrraaeellii HHuummaann RRiigghhttss VViioollaattiioonnss aanndd HHaammaass SSuuppppoorrtt RReesseeaarrcchhiiinngg PPeerrcceeppttiiioonnss ooff PPaallleessttiiinniiiaann rreeffuuggeeeess iiinn JJoorrddaann Lidwien Wijchers IIssrraaeellii HHuummaann RRiigghhttss VViioollaattiioonnss aanndd HHaammaass SSuuppppoorrtt RReesseeaarrcchhiiinngg PPeerrcceeppttiiioonnss ooff PPaallleessttiiinniiiaann rreeffuuggeeeess iiinn JJoorrddaann Cover photo Lidwien Wijchers Banner in Irbid refugee camp, Jordan: “The Palestinian case and Jerusalem are always in the heart and consciousness of his Majesty the King” Lidwien Wijchers s0801240 Master Thesis Human Geography Center for International Conflict Analysis and Management Radboud University Nijmegen Supervisor: Dr. S. Vukovic Second Reader: Dr. J. Wagemakers July 2013 Israeli Human Rights Violations and Hamas Support ii Preface This thesis is submitted as part of the Human Geography Master specialization Conflicts, Identities, and Territories at the Center of International Conflict Analysis and Management associated with the Radboud University Nijmegen. It is the result of fieldwork conducted in Jordan from August 2012 until March 2013. Throughout the process of writing this thesis, many people have been of help to me. Not in the least the respondents of my questionnaire, and experts with whom I conducted interviews. I hereby express my appreciation to all of them. Furthermore, I would like to extend gratitude to Dr. Siniša Vukovic who supervised me through the writing stages of the thesis, and to my second reader Dr. Joas Wagemakers. Acknowledgment must also be given to Dr. Gearoid Millar, for his guidance in the initial stages of the project. Four other individuals deserve recognition. Lauren Salathiel and Mohamed el Atfy; thank you for your willingness to be sounding boards. Hashim Taani and Rakan Odeh, I am much indebted to you both for the amount of time and help you have selflessly given.
    [Show full text]
  • The Decline of Palestinian Exceptionalism Observation of a Trend and Its Consequences for Refugee Studies in the Middle East
    The Decline of Palestinian Exceptionalism Observation of a trend and its consequences for refugee studies in the Middle East By Mike Kagan Paper Prepared for the Migration and Refugee Movements in the Middle East and North Africa The Forced Migration & Refugee Studies Program The American University in Cairo, Egypt October 23-25, 2007 Discussion Paper The Decline of Palestinian Exceptionalism Observation of a trend and its consequences for refugee studies in the Middle East I. Introduction There has historically been a great divide at the heart of refugee policy and scholarship in the Middle East, between Palestinian refugees and all others. This intellectual and policy divide runs throughout political discourse, governmental and United Nations administration, and civil society activism. It poses a challenge to the coherency of forced migration studies in the Middle East. There is now a significant and growing inter- disciplinary literature about refugees of many nationalities in the region, but the largest and most visible refugee group in the region has been traditionally treated as “a case apart,” to borrow a phrase used recently in the Forced Migration Review (Couldrey and Morris 2006). Any scholarly attempt to synthesize this expanding knowledge into a coherent theoretical or research agenda – especially if one aims for this research to have practical application – will likely founder so long as this remains the case. The division between Palestinian and non-Palestinian refugees has been driven by the assumption – what Michael Dumper has called an “orthodoxy” -- that the Palestinian refugee case is unique, and should be treated as such (Dumper 2007, 347). But this assumption has always been questionable, and (more important) it is increasingly being questioned.1 In this paper, I argue that while the Palestinian refugee case does indeed bear some unique characteristics and thus should be treated separately in some ways, the predicament of Palestinian refugees also bears much in common with other refugees.
    [Show full text]
  • Jordan – Palestinians – West Bank – Passports – Citizenship – Fatah
    Refugee Review Tribunal AUSTRALIA RRT RESEARCH RESPONSE Research Response Number: JOR35401 Country: Jordan Date: 27 October 2009 Keywords: Jordan – Palestinians – West Bank – Passports – Citizenship – Fatah This response was prepared by the Research & Information Services Section of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the RRT within time constraints. This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. This research response may not, under any circumstance, be cited in a decision or any other document. Anyone wishing to use this information may only cite the primary source material contained herein. Questions 1. Please provide background on the issue of Jordanian citizenship for persons of West Bank Palestinian descent. 2. What is the overall situation for Palestinian citizens of Jordan? 3. Have there been any crackdowns upon Fatah members over the last 15 years? 4. What kind of relationship exists between Fatah and the Jordanian authorities? RESPONSE 1. Please provide background on the issue of Jordanian citizenship for persons of West Bank Palestinian descent. Most Palestinians in Jordan hold a Jordanian passport of some type but the status accorded different categories of Palestinians in Jordan varies, as does the manner and terminology through which different sources classify and discuss Palestinians in Jordan. The webpage of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) states that: “All Palestine refugees in Jordan have full Jordanian citizenship with the exception of about 120,000 refugees originally from the Gaza Strip, which up to 1967 was administered by Egypt”; the latter being “eligible for temporary Jordanian passports, which do not entitle them to full citizenship rights such as the right to vote and employment with the government”.
    [Show full text]
  • Urban Agriculture in Camp Communities: New Perspectives
    Urban agriculture in camp communities: new perspectives Recommendations for action for community-based projects in the scope of urban agriculture in Palestinian refugee camps in Jordan Julia Mira Brennauer | Svenja Binz | Phil-Torben von Lueder Urban agriculture in camp communities: new perspectives Recommendations for action for community-based projects in the scope of urban agriculture in Palestinian refugee camps in Jordan Julia Mira Brennauer | Svenja Binz | Phil-Torben von Lueder Eidesstattliche Versicherung Hiermit erklären wir, dass wir die vorliegende Arbeit selbstständig und eigenhändig sowie ohne unerlaubte fremde Hilfe und ausschließlich unter Verwendung der aufgeführten Quel- len und Hilfsmittel angefertigt haben. Berlin, den _____________________ (Julia Brennauer) _____________________ (Phil-Torben von Lueder) _____________________ (Svenja Binz) Acknowledgements This project would not have been possible without the exeptional help of Mahmood, Ah- med, Joker, Jalal, Hussein, Fadi and all camp inhabitants from Talbiyeh Camp, Husn Camp, Dheisheh Camp and Jerash Camp. Special thanks to Nico, Lisa, Don Fabianski, Nadja, Isa, Nina, Kilian and our lovely families for your unlimited support. We are particularly grateful for the openess and trust of all our interview partners. Special thanks to our supervisors Philipp Misselwitz (Habitat Unit), Emily Kelling and Martina Löw (Fachgebiet Planungs- und Architektursoziologie). List of abbreviations CBO – Community Based Organisation CBRC – Community Based Rehabilitation Center CBRC – Community
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter WINTER 2021, ISSUE 211
    newsletter WINTER 2021, ISSUE 211 in this issue 1-2 Anera is Back in Jordan! Anera is Back in Jordan! 3 With an influx of refugees from four regional wars in just 70 years and a By the Numbers: lack of water and other resources, the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan and Some Facts About Refugees and its people face many challenges. Millions of refugees from these conflicts Vulnerable Communities in Jordan live in Jordan. The country has more than two million Palestinian refugees registered with UNRWA. It has the second highest number of 3 UNHCR-registered refugees in the world, at 655,000. Doing Something to Help Palestine by Janah Szewczyk The refugee population places a huge burden on the country's services and resources. In order to help respond to the enormous needs, Anera 4-5 returned to Jordan in 2019, after an eight-year absence. Our support in Map of Water, Sanitation & Hygiene the initial stages focuses on medical aid and humanitarian relief and Projects in Gaza educational programming, which are particularly important during COVID times. 6 In Case You Missed It: Delivering Medical Aid The Latest From anera.org Shortages of medicines and healthcare supplies are a chronic problem in Jordan's refugee camps. Anera has a venerable track record in delivering medical donations across Palestine and Lebanon, and we are well positioned to do the same in Jordan. In 2020, Anera delivered two pilot shipments to Jordan as a test to continued on page 2 credits Anera is Back in Jordan! continued from page 1 BY THE NUMBERS The Anera newsletter is published quarterly by American Near East Refugee Aid (Anera), a non-profit agency established in 1968 and dedicated to providing development, health, education and employment programs to Some facts about refugees and vulnerable Palestinian communities and impoverished families throughout the Middle East.
    [Show full text]
  • UN Assistance Mission for Iraq ﺑﻌﺜﺔ اﻷﻣﻢ اﻟﻤﺘﺤﺪة (UNAMI) ﻟﺘﻘﺪﻳﻢ اﻟﻤﺴﺎﻋﺪة
    ﺑﻌﺜﺔ اﻷﻣﻢ اﻟﻤﺘﺤﺪة .UN Assistance Mission for Iraq 1 ﻟﺘﻘﺪﻳﻢ اﻟﻤﺴﺎﻋﺪة ﻟﻠﻌﺮاق (UNAMI) Human Rights Report 1 January – 31 March 2007 Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS..............................................................................................................................1 INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................................................2 SUMMARY ...................................................................................................................................................2 PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS.......................................................................................................4 EXTRA-JUDICIAL EXECUTIONS AND TARGETED AND INDISCRIMINATE KILLINGS .........................................4 EDUCATION SECTOR AND THE TARGETING OF ACADEMIC PROFESSIONALS ................................................8 FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION .........................................................................................................................10 MINORITIES...............................................................................................................................................13 PALESTINIAN REFUGEES ............................................................................................................................15 WOMEN.....................................................................................................................................................16 DISPLACEMENT
    [Show full text]
  • Survey of Palestinian Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons 2004 - 2005
    Survey of Palestinian Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons 2004 - 2005 BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency & Refugee Rights i BADIL is a member of the Global Palestine Right of Return Coalition Preface The Survey of Palestinian Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons is published annually by BADIL Resource Center. The Survey provides an overview of one of the largest and longest-standing unresolved refugee and displaced populations in the world today. It is estimated that two out of every five of today’s refugees are Palestinian. The Survey has several objectives: (1) It aims to provide basic information about Palestinian displacement – i.e., the circumstances of displacement, the size and characteristics of the refugee and displaced population, as well as the living conditions of Palestinian refugees and internally displaced persons; (2) It aims to clarify the framework governing protection and assistance for this displaced population; and (3) It sets out the basic principles for crafting durable solutions for Palestinian refugees and internally displaced persons, consistent with international law, relevant United Nations Resolutions and best practice. In short, the Survey endeavors to address the lack of information or misinformation about Palestinian refugees and internally displaced persons, and to counter political arguments that suggest that the issue of Palestinian refugees and internally displaced persons can be resolved outside the realm of international law and practice applicable to all other refugee and displaced populations. The Survey examines the status of Palestinian refugees and internally displaced persons on a thematic basis. Chapter One provides a short historical background to the root causes of Palestinian mass displacement.
    [Show full text]
  • 9-11 and Terrorist Travel- Full
    AND TERRORIST TRAVEL Staff Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States 9/11 AND TERRORIST TRAVEL Staff Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States By Thomas R. Eldridge Susan Ginsburg Walter T. Hempel II Janice L. Kephart Kelly Moore and Joanne M. Accolla, Staff Assistant Alice Falk, Editor Note from the Executive Director The Commission staff organized its work around specialized studies, or monographs, prepared by each of the teams. We used some of the evolving draft material for these studies in preparing the seventeen staff statements delivered in conjunction with the Commission’s 2004 public hearings. We used more of this material in preparing draft sections of the Commission’s final report. Some of the specialized staff work, while not appropriate for inclusion in the report, nonetheless offered substantial information or analysis that was not well represented in the Commission’s report. In a few cases this supplemental work could be prepared to a publishable standard, either in an unclassified or classified form, before the Commission expired. This study is on immigration, border security and terrorist travel issues. It was prepared principally by Thomas Eldridge, Susan Ginsburg, Walter T. Hempel II, Janice Kephart, and Kelly Moore, with assistance from Joanne Accolla, and editing assistance from Alice Falk. As in all staff studies, they often relied on work done by their colleagues. This is a study by Commission staff. While the Commissioners have been briefed on the work and have had the opportunity to review earlier drafts of some of this work, they have not approved this text and it does not necessarily reflect their views.
    [Show full text]
  • Jordan – Palestinians – Gaza – Discrimination – Unemployment – Passports
    Refugee Review Tribunal AUSTRALIA RRT RESEARCH RESPONSE Research Response Number: JOR34052 Country: Jordan Date: 1 December 2008 Keywords: Jordan – Palestinians – Gaza – Discrimination – Unemployment – Passports This response was prepared by the Research & Information Services Section of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the RRT within time constraints. This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. This research response may not, under any circumstance, be cited in a decision or any other document. Anyone wishing to use this information may only cite the primary source material contained herein. Questions 1. Please provide detailed information on the status of Palestinians from Gaza in Jordan, their socio-economic circumstances; the discrimination they encounter with respect to employment, access to services and property rights; and the degree of hardship faced by members this group in their day to day lives. 2. Country information suggests that Palestinians from Gaza are allowed to work in the private sector in Jordan. Please provide a realistic assessment of this proposition in the context of Jordan’s official and unofficial employment rates; the level of Palestinians’ participation in the private (unskilled) work force; their rate of success in finding employment, and information suggesting that between 30% and 60% of Palestinians live below poverty levels in Jordan. 3. What is the extent of assistance provided by UNRWA to Palestinians from Gaza living in Jordan? 4. Are Palestinians from Gaza prevented from obtaining driver’s licenses in Jordan? 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Backgrounder on Hamas
    APPENDIX F International Relief Fund for the Afflicted and Needy (Canada) Backgrounder on Hamas Appendix F – Backgrounder on Hamas1 Hamas is a radical Sunni terrorist organization that employs political and violent means to pursue the goal of establishing an Islamic Palestinian state in Israel.2 The origins of the movement lie with the Muslim Brotherhood,3 an Islamist organization founded in Egypt in 1928, and led by early Islamist figures such as Hassan el-Banna and Sayyid Qutb. Starting in 1967 and continuing throughout the 1970’s, the Palestinian branch of the Brotherhood gained popularity amongst the people of Gaza via communal activism, religious preaching and education.4 With the outbreak of the first intifada5 against Israel in 1987, the Palestinian Muslim Brotherhood moved beyond its basis as a social and religious group establishing Hamas as an Islamist alternative to the secular nationalist resistance led by the PLO. Through its Charter, Hamas clearly states its objectives of establishing an Islamic state in all of Palestine. To realize this goal, the organization relies upon the use of violent jihad, the education of the Palestinian population in its Islamist ideology, providing social services, and promoting the liberation of the “Palestinian land” as an individual duty of Muslims everywhere. Objectives, Strategies, and Structure In its Charter, Hamas describes itself as a “distinct Palestinian Movement which owes its loyalty to Allah, derives from Islam its way of life and strives to raise the banner of Allah over every inch
    [Show full text]
  • Rights of Non-Returnable Stateless Palestinians In
    Forced to leave but nowhere to return to: Rights of non‐returnable stateless Palestinians in the Netherlands April 2016 Authors: Supervisor: Mr Dr Lieneke Slingenberg Annelieke Beversluis Senior Research Associate: Najuan Daadleh Merle‐Marei Lage Katharina von Schack Josha Polak Migration Law Clinic www.migrationlawclinic.org 1 Migration Law Clinic and Migration Law Expertise Centre This is an expert opinion by the Migration Law Clinic. The Migration Law Clinic of the VU University Amsterdam provides legal advice to lawyers, Non‐Governmental Organisations, and other organisations on complex legal questions of European migration law. Top students in the last years of their study at the Law Faculty of the VU University Amsterdam carry out research and write legal advice at the Clinic. They are closely supervised by the staff of the Migration Law Section of this Faculty. The Migration Law Clinic is the responsibility of the Foundation (Stichting) Migration Law Expertise Centre (No. 59,652,969 Chamber of Commerce). For more information see: migrationlawclinic.org © Migration Law Clinic 2016 This expert opinion is copyright, but may be reproduced by any method, but not for resale. For any inquiries please contact [email protected] Available online at: www.migrationlawclinic.org 2 Contents 1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................................... 4 2. Can stateless Palestinians return to the countries of their former habitual residence? ......................
    [Show full text]