Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Raed Jarrar's detention by Israel raises alarm
Raed Jarrar's detention by Israel raises alarm
Jun 14, 2026 1:53 PM

  A leading human rights group has raised the alarm over an incident it fears is an indication of the Israeli authorities' growing intolerance of dissent.

  Last week, Raed Jarrar, advocacy director for the Middle East and North Africa division of Amnesty International USA, was stopped at the Allenby crossing between Jordan and the West Bank while on a personal visit to his family following his father's death.

  Jarrar, who is an American citizen of Palestinian origin, was detained and questioned for hours before being denied entry into the West Bank.

  Prior to joining Amnesty International, Jarrar had been allowed into the West Bank on at least four occasions in the past.

  According to an Israeli spokeswoman, the office of Public Security and Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan, which is leading efforts to thwart the work of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement (BDS), had recommended Jarrar be denied entry.

  The Palestinian Authority's interior ministry also confirmed to media that Jarrar was barred from entering Israel due to "his [boycott, divestment and sanctions] activities".

  BDS is a Palestinian-led rights campaign which aims to pressure Israel - through economic, cultural and other means - into ending its occupation of Palestinian and Arab lands, and to grant its Palestinian citizens full rights.

  An Israeli document posted by Jarrar on Twitter showed he was denied entry due to "illegal immigration considerations" and "public security or public safety or public order considerations".

  But Philip Luther, research and advocacy director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International, said that the refusal was "apparently in retaliation for the organisation's work on human rights violations".

  Similarly, Jarrar said that Israeli officials at the border criticised and questioned him over Amnesty's work on settlements.

  "They asked me questions about the campaign. They asked me 'Why does Amnesty International have a problem with Israel?' I said I'm here because my father passed away. But they were more interested in the group's work."

  Amnesty's fears

  

  In June, Amnesty urged governments to ban Israeli goods made in settlements and to bar companies from operating there, citing their contribution to Palestinian displacement, home demolitions, restrictions on movement, and denial of rights to water, land and other natural resources.

  Following its anti-settlements campaign, Amnesty voiced fears that Israel may be planning to go after its funding.

  At the time, media reports emerged that the Israeli finance ministry was moving to strip the group of its tax-exempt status.

  Israel amended its entry law in March, allowing authorities to ban entry to foreigners who support boycotting the country, including its settlements in the West Bank.

  But Amnesty said its "campaign on settlements, which [Jarrar] plays a leading role in, does not call for a consumer boycott of Israeli settlement products".

  The group is also not part of the BDS movement and has never voiced support or opposition to boycotts. But this case has raised fears that Israel is also attempting to silence rights groups and activists who work on highlighting the illegality of settlements.

  "This appears to be another ominous signal of the Israeli authorities' resolve to silence human rights organizations and activists who are critical of [their] government," Luther said.

  Al-Jazeera

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
"This brutality will never break our will to be free"
  By: Khalid Mish'al   For 18 months my people in Gaza have been under siege, incarcerated inside the world's biggest prison, sealed off from land, air and sea, caged and starved, denied even medication for our sick. After the slow death policy came the bombardment. In this most densely populated of...
Gaza children traumatized after Israeli offensive
  Five-year-old Mohammed al-Najjar lets his mind wander as he puts crayon to paper in an effort to depict an Israeli air strike inside a refugee camp in the Gaza Strip.   "This is the plane and those are two missiles it fired. They hit a house and the house was damaged...
Somalia at a crossroads
  Recent developments in Somalia appear to suggest that the country may be on the verge of reaching an end to two decades of war, displacement and hunger.   Somalis were first given hope when Ethiopian forces, who invaded Somalia in late 2006, began withdrawing in 2008.   This was quickly followed by...
Fear and trauma in Gaza's schools
  As students filed into the courtyard of Asma elementary school in Gaza City for the first time since the Israeli offensive began, they were greeted by a bleak reminder of the violence that left more than 1,300 Palestinians dead and thousands injured.   A hole punched by an Israeli rocket scarred...
Palestinian men bear trauma of war
  The war on Gaza has taken a heavy emotional and mental toll on the people of the Gaza Strip. Doctors say that at least half of the population need professional help to come to terms with the war.   Palestinian men have been hit especially hard. Many of them have spent...
NATO genocide in Afghanistan
  Sloganeers, propagandists and politicians often use the word "genocide" in ways that the law does not permit. But rarely is the crime of genocide invoked when Western militaries murder Muslim groups.   This essay argues that the internationally recognized crime of genocide applies to the intentional killings that NATO troops commit...
Obstacles in Gaza
  Israel's three-week war on Gaza caused billions of dollars in damage and left the already-tattered local economy on the verge of collapse.   Some of the world's richest countries - including the US which has promised a $20-million aid package - have pledged monies to rebuild the Gaza Strip.   Al Jazeera's...
Gaza: The Massacre in Zeitoun
  IN the annals of war crimes, the name "Zeitoun" will assume its place alongside names like "My Lai," "Fallujah," "Sabra-Shatila," "Guernica," "Nanking," "Lidice," and "Wounded Knee."   In the last two days, the massacre that took place in Zeitoun, a neighborhood on the southern flats approaching Gaza City, has only now...
Israeli crimes on Palestinians before and after Hamas
  Startling-and stomach turning: where Palestinians are involved, memory and sense of proportion fail us. The Jewish conscience, justifiably, has long called upon the world's powers and upon their citizens to remain vigilant, never to forget -in the name of "the duty of memory"- the atrocities, massacres and genocides of the...
Under siege again, but Gaza will not die
  Shifa hospital received hundreds of bodies of those killed and thousands of those wounded during the December 27, 2008 - January 18, 2009 22-day attack, invasion and occupation of Gaza by the Israeli military.   Now in front of Shifa hospital was a tent filled with military armaments -- rocket parts,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved