Israel's government fails to renew law that keeps out Palestinian spouses

The Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law prevented Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip who marry Israeli citizens from gaining citizenship themselves.

A general view shows the swearing-in ceremony of Israel's parliament in Jerusalem on April 6, 2021.
AFP

A general view shows the swearing-in ceremony of Israel's parliament in Jerusalem on April 6, 2021.

A ban in force since 2003 on Palestinians and citizens and residents of Israel extending their rights to their Palestinian spouses has come to an end after lawmakers failed to extend the controversial measure.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's request to prolong the ban had divided his disparate coalition with both Jewish left-wingers and Arab conservatives strongly opposed.

In a vote early on Tuesday, the Knesset tied 59 votes to 59, meaning the measure lapsed.

The outcome underlined the wafer-thin majority Bennett's coalition commands in the 120-seat parliament.

The eight parties in the coalition were united by little but their shared enmity to opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu, whom they unseated from the premiership last month after a record 12 straight years in power.

READ MORE: Israel lawmakers to vote on renewing law that restricts Palestinian spouses

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A racist measure

The ban first enacted during the second Palestinian intifada had been justified by supporters on security grounds but critics, including many left-wing and Arab lawmakers, say it’s a racist measure aimed at restricting the growth of Israel’s Arab minority.

The ban has caused endless complications for Palestinians living across Israel and the territories it has occupied since 1967.

A substantial number of those affected live in annexed east Jerusalem and therefore have Israeli residency, without necessarily being citizens of the Jewish state.

READ MORE: Apartheid or not: What do Israelis and Palestinians think of Israel?
Protests 

In a protest against the measure outside parliament on Monday, some recounted the hardships of seeking permits to join their spouses, or the risks of entering Israeli territory without permission.

Ali Meteb told AFP that his wife not having Israeli residency rights had confined his family to a "continuous prison".

"I am asking for rights that the state owes us... for my wife to have Israeli ID, residency rights and freedom of movement," he said.

Jessica Montell, the head of Hamoked, an Israeli human rights group that provides legal services to Palestinians, said "tens of thousands of families are harmed by this law".

READ MORE: Sheikh Jarrah: A new microcosm of Israeli Apartheid

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