Soren
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All Arab countries except Jordan:
Palestinians are not allowed to become citizens of Arab countries, in accordance with Arab League Decree 1547 for 1959, "in order to preserve the Palestinian entity and Palestinian identity." Even in Jordan they can no longer become citizens. (There have been some exceptions: Palestinian Christians in Lebanon in the 1950s, Palestinians born from Egyptian mothers in 2011.) Palestinians face severe travel restrictions throughout the Arab world. They do not receive passports and their travel documents are only accepted by a few countries. Palestinians cannot vote or run for office in national elections. Children born to Palestinians do not get citizenship in their host countries, violating Article 7 of theConvention on the Rights of the Child.
Jordan: 1967: Jordan refused to allow Gazans who came after the Six Day War to become Jordanian citizens.Today some 165,000 Palestinians in Jordan cannot become citizens and get no government services. 1970: 3500-5000 Palestinians killed and 20,000 Palestinians expelled, their camps demolished, in the Black September events. 1988: Jordan revoked citizenship for millions of West Bank Palestinians as they declared "independence." As usual, this move was justified as being for their own good. 2010: Jordan continued to revoke citizenship for thousands more Palestinians 2012: Jordan passed an electoral law that effectively limits the number of Palestinian members of Parliament to less than 10% 2013: Jordan places Palestinian refugees from Syria in special camps that they cannot leave, separate from other refugees, and turns hundreds or thousands back to a dangerous future in Syria. 2014: Palestinians who are citizens are still denied equal rights in the military, and on getting college scholarships and being admitted to some public universities, among other areas.
Egypt: 1948: Placed all Palestine refugees that reached Egypt into camps, forced men to go back to Palestine to fight. 1949: Expelled all Palestinian from Egyptian camps into Gaza. Very few Palestinian Arabs were left in Egypt. 1950: Egypt refused any UNRWA presence on its territory, relegating it to Gaza. 1949 - 1956: Any Palestinians in Egypt were barred from schooling and employment. 2013: Hundreds of Palestinian refugees from Syria placed into jail as they try to enter Egypt 2013-now: Egypt has effectively closed the Rafah border with Gaza, even limiting hospital patients from traveling, effectively imprisoning 1.7 million Gazans.
Lebanon: 1950-58: Would only issue one-way travel documents for Palestinians to leave the country 1962: Palestinians classified as "foreigners": 73 job categories banned for Palestinians until 2010; now there are "only" 50 jobs off limits They are still banned from working as physicians, journalists, pharmacists or lawyers. They are not permitted to build new houses or own property, or even to repair their homes Martial law imposed on refugee camps. Army stops people from entering and exiting. Limitations on schools for Palestinian "foreigners" Not allowed to live outside refugee camps, which in turn are not allowed to grow. Population of camps is now triple capacity. Palestinians not allowed to create organizations. 1975-78: At least 5000 Palestinians killed in Lebanese civil war 1985-88: Thousands killed in "War of the Camps" 1995: Law prohibiting Palestinians from entering country without a visa; and visas weren't issued. Those expelled from Gulf states could not return to Lebanon. (Law repealed in 1999.) 2005: Specific laws prohibiting foreigners who are not "nationals of a recognized state" - Palestinians - from owning property. Those who owned it previously cannot pass it to their children. 2007: 31,000 Palestinians homeless because while Lebanese Army destroyed Nahr el Bared camp 2013: Some 50,000 refugees from Syria treated differently from other Syrian refugees; expensive temporary short-term visas effectively make them criminals 2013: Lebanon starts turning some Palestinian Syrian refugees away at the border
Kuwait: 1991: 400,000 Palestinians were harassed and forced out of the country.
Libya: 1994-5: Expelled 30,000 Palestinians, dismissed many from their jobs and confiscated their houses Arab countries refused to take in the new refugees. Hundreds were stranded in the desert or the sea. Eventually Libya allowed some to stay but kept threatening to expel them again. In the end about15,000 were forced to go to Arab countries they had documents for, Gulf countries, and Western nations. 2011: Palestinians were forced to pay a special tax of $1550. 2012: Many Palestinians lost their homes as properties were claimed by others in the wake of the revolution and the collapse of the judicial system.
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