June
5, 2012
Associated Press
JERUSALEM
(AP) When Sandra Tamari arrived at Israel’s international airport, she received
an unusual request: A security agent pushed a computer screen in front of her,
connected to Gmail and told her to “log in.”
The agent,
suspecting Tamari was involved in pro-Palestinian activism, wanted to inspect
her private email account for incriminating evidence. The 42-year-old American
of Palestinian descent refused and was swiftly expelled from the country.
Tamari’s
experience is not unique. In a cyber-age twist on Israel’s vaunted history of
airport security, the country has begun to force incoming travelers deemed
suspicious to open personal email accounts for inspection, visitors say.
Targeting
mainly Muslims or Arabs, the practice appears to be aimed at rooting out
visitors who have histories of pro-Palestinian activism, and in recent weeks,
has led to the expulsion of at least three American women.
It remains
unclear how widespread the practice is.
However,
asked about Tamari’s claims, the Shin Bet security agency confirmed she had
been interrogated and said its agents acted in accordance with the law.
Israel has a
long history of using ethnic profiling, calling it a necessary evil resulting
from its bitter experience with terrorist attacks. Arab travelers and anyone
else seen as a risk are often subjected to intense questioning and invasive
inspections, including strip searches.
The security
procedures appear to be getting stricter: Recent searches of journalists at
official events have been invasive enough to create a series of mini-uproars
and walkouts ~ a situation that has dovetailed with increasing concerns that
the government is trying to stifle dissent.
Diana Butto,
a former legal adviser to the Palestinian Authority and a fellow at the Harvard
Kennedy School of Government, said the policy of email checks, once used
sporadically, appears to have become more widespread over the past year.
Butto said
she has led three tour groups to the region over the past year, and in each
case, at least one member of the group was asked to open their email. She said
Muslims, Arabs and Indians were typically targeted, and in most cases, were
denied entry.
Butto said
agents typically want to see people’s itineraries, articles they have written
or Facebook status updates.
“The problem
is there’s no way to honestly say you’re coming to visit the West Bank without
falling into some type of security trap,” she said. “Either you lie and risk
being caught in a lie, or you tell the truth … and it’s not clear whether
you’ll be allowed in.”
Tamari, who
is from St. Louis, said she arrived in Israel on May 21 to participate in an
interfaith conference. She described herself as a Quaker peace activist and
acknowledged taking part in campaigns calling for boycotts and divestment from
Israel.
Given her
activism, Tamari said she expected some security delays. But she was caught off
guard by the order to open her email account. She said the agents discovered
her address while rifling through her personal papers.
“That’s when
they turned their (computer) screens around to me and said, ‘Log in,” she said.
When she refused, an interrogator said, “‘Well, you must be a terrorist. You
are hiding something.’”
Tamari said
she was searched, placed in a holding cell and flown back to the U.S. the
following day. “The idea that somebody my age, a Quaker, on a peace delegation
with folks from the U.S., would be denied entry ~ that never crossed my mind,”
she said.
Najwa
Doughman, a 25-year-old Palestinian American from New York City, said she
underwent a similar experience when she arrived for a one-week vacation on May
26.
A female
interrogator ordered Doughman to open her Gmail account, threatening she would
be deported if she didn’t.
“She typed in
gmail.com and she turned the keyboard toward me and said, ‘Log in. Log in
now,’” Doughman recounted. “I asked, ‘Is this legal?’ She said, ‘Log in.’”
She said the
agent searched for keywords like “West Bank” and “Palestine” and made fun of a
chat in which Doughman talked of reading graffiti on Israel’s West Bank
separation barrier.
“After she
read a bunch of stuff, humiliating and mocking me, I said, ‘I think you’ve read
enough,’” Doughman said, adding that agents jotted down names and emails of her
friends as they inspected her chat history.
Doughman’s
traveling companion, Sasha Al-Sarabi, said agents pulled her aside and checked
out her Facebook page.
Both women
said they were approached because of their Arab family names, and were
repeatedly asked about the nature of their visit, and whether they planned to
go to the West Bank and participate in anti-Israel demonstrations.
While acknowledging
she belonged to Palestinian activist groups when she was in college, Doughman
said she insisted the one-week visit was purely for a vacation.
“The
interrogator asked me, ‘Do you feel more Arab or more American? … Surely you
must feel more Arab,” Doughman said. “I told her I was born in the U.S. and
studied there, but she didn’t like my answer.”
After hours
of questioning, both women were told they would not be allowed in. They said
they were subjected to strip searches, placed in a detention center and sent
back to the U.S. the following day. Doughman said they weren’t allowed to call
the U.S. Embassy.
American
Embassy spokesman Kurt Hoyer said the embassy does not comment on specific
cases. But he said the embassy is “usually” contacted whenever an American
citizen is not allowed to enter Israel, or any other country.
The embassy
typically remains in contact with local authorities throughout the process
until a decision on entry is made.
He said the
U.S. stresses to all governments “to treat American passport holders as
Americans, regardless of their ethnic origin … At the same time, any sovereign
nation has the right to decide who to let in, and not to let in.”
Tamari and
Doughman’s cases were first reported on the left-wing blog Mondoweiss.
Israel has
become increasingly strict following a series of run-ins with international
activists in recent years, highlighted by a deadly clash two years ago between
Israeli naval commandos and a flotilla trying to break Israel’s naval blockade
of the Gaza Strip. Both sides accused the other of provoking the violence in
which nine Turkish activists were killed.
Since then,
Israel has prevented international activists from arriving on similar flotillas
as well as a pair of “fly-ins” by pro-Palestinian activists. Israeli officials
acknowledge they used social media accounts, such as Facebook and Twitter, to
identify activists ahead of time and prevent them from boarding flights to
Israel.
Emanuel
Gross, a law professor at Haifa University, said such a practice would seem to
be illegal in Israel.
“In Israel, you need a search warrant to go into somebody’s computer,” he said. “I’m skeptical that the security guards asked a judge first for a warrant and I’m skeptical that a judge would give it.”
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