Some Americans detained upon arrival in Israel reported being
questioned about their political activity based on 'profiles' on the
controversial website Canary Mission. Documents obtained by Haaretz now
clearly show that is indeed a source of information for decisions to bar
entry
The Strategic Affairs and Public
Diplomacy Ministry is using simple Google searches, mainly the
controversial American right-wing website Canary Mission, to bar
political activists from entering Israel, according to documents
obtained by Haaretz.
Links to Canary Mission and Facebook posts are seen on an official Ministry of Strategic Affairs document.
The ministry then
sent the officials at the airport an official report classified
“sensitive” about Alqasem’s supposed political activities, which
included information from five links – four from Facebook and one, the
main source, from the Canary Mission site, which follows pro-Palestinian
activists on U.S. campuses.
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A decision on Alqasem’s appeal against her deportation was expected Thursday afternoon.
This week, the American Jewish news site The Forward reported
that at least $100,000 of Canary Mission’s budget had been contributed
through the San Francisco Jewish Federation and the Helen Diller Family
Foundation, which donates to Jewish education. The donation was handed
to a group registered in Beit Shemesh called Megamot Shalom,
specifically stating that it was for Canary Mission. A few hours after
the report was published, the federation announced that it would no longer fund the group.
Over the past few months some of the Americans who have been detained for questioning upon arrival in Israel
have reported that they were questioned about their political activity
based on “profiles” about them published on Canary Mission. The
documents obtained by Haaretz now show clearly that the site is indeed
the No. 1 source of information for the decision to bar entry to
Alqasem.
According
to the links that were the basis for the decision to suspend the
student visa that Alqasem had been granted by the Israeli Consulate in
Miami, she was president of the Florida chapter of a group called
Students for Justice in Palestine, information quoted directly from the
Canary Mission. The national arm of that organization, National Students
for Justice in Palestine, is indeed on the list of 20 groups that the Strategic Affairs Ministry compiled as criteria to invoke the anti-boycott law.
However, Alqasem was not a member at the national level, but rather a
local activist. She told the appeals tribunal that the local chapter had
only a few members.
Canary Mission's profile of Lara Alqasem.
The ministry also
cited as a reason for barring Alqasem’s entry to Israel a Facebook post
showing that “In April 2016 [her] chapter conducted an ongoing campaign
calling for the boycott of Sabra hummus, the American version of Hummus
Tzabar, because Strauss, which owns Tzabar, funds the Golani Brigade.”
Alqasem told the tribunal that she had not taken an active part in this
campaign. Another link was about a writers’ petition calling on a
cultural center to refuse sponsorship by Israel for its activities. Yet
another post, by the local Students for Justice in Palestine, praised
the fact that an international security company had stopped operations
in Israel. None of these links quoted Alqasem.
She
told the tribunal that she is not currently a member of any pro-boycott
group and would not come to study for her M.A. in Israel if she were.
The Strategic Affairs
Ministry report on Alqasem is so meager that its writers mentioned it
themselves: “It should be noted that in this case we rely on a
relatively small number of sources found on the Internet.” Over the past
few months Haaretz has been following up reports of this nature that
have been the basis for denying entry to activists, and found that in
many other cases the material consisted of superficial Google searches
and that the ministry, by admission of its own senior officials, does
not collect information from non-public sources.
The ministry’s
criteria for invoking the anti-boycott law state clearly that in order
to bar entry to political activists, they must “hold senior or
significant positions in the organizations,” including “official senior
roles in prominent groups (such as board members).”
But the report on
Alqasem does not indicate that she met the criterion of “senior”
official in the national movement, nor was this the case for other young
people questioned recently at the airport. In some cases it was the
Shin Bet security service that questioned people due to past
participation in activities such as demonstrations in the territories,
and not BDS activities.
“Key activists,”
according to the ministry’s criteria, also means people who
“consistently take part in promoting BDS in the framework of prominent
delegitimization groups or independently, and not, for example, an
activist who comes as part of a delegation.” In Alqasem’s case, however,
her visa was issued after she was accepted for study at Hebrew
University.
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