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Haaretz
The
Jordanian MIRS chirps on the table. `Where`s Nur?`
asks the woman on the line from Amman. `She`s
standing next to me,` replies her husband in
Azariyeh, east of Jerusalem. A chirp every few
minutes. Yihye Bassa, a 40-year-old date merchant,
has for several years been forbidden for security
reasons to travel to Jordan; Nibin, his wife, 26, is
forbidden to come here. He barely knows the two
girls, 4-year-old Nur and 1-year-old Talin. They are
with their mother in Jordan. Yihye met Nur for the
first time two years after her birth, when he was
still allowed to travel to Jordan; he met Talin for
the first time a few weeks ago, on the Allenby
Bridge.
In an unusual and very moving humanitarian gesture,
Israel let the couple meet for three hours on the
Allenby Bridge, after preventing them from seeing
each other at all for about two years. Family
reunification: a half-meeting on the bridge, without
refreshments, as a `pre-High Court of Justice
petition` gesture. Moreover, Israel allowed Nur to
join her father for a few months, and now she is
here, in Azariyeh. But 18-month-old Talin was not
allowed to join her father. All for security
reasons. Yihye says that his problems began when the
Shin Bet security services wanted to recruit him as
a collaborator and he refused. Since then he has
been refused permission to leave.
Now Yihye is sitting in the offices of the new
community center in Azariyeh that he runs on a
voluntary basis. Nur is still confused by the new
person in her life and the foreign landscape, and
Nibin chirps from Jordan on her MIRS every few
minutes to ask if everything is all right. Oh, the
Israeli occupation.
Yihye Bassa is a Hebrew-speaking businessman, who
buys dates in the Arava and the Beit She`an Valley
and sells them in the West Bank and in Gaza with an
Israeli partner. His paternal grandmother was
Jewish. When he was still allowed to travel to
Jordan, he had a company there too, which bought
dates in Iraq and sold them in Jordan. Six years ago
he married Nibin, a Palestinian from Jordan. Yihye
divided his life between Amman and Azariyeh. Nibin
has submitted several requests for an Israeli visa
at the embassy in Amman - and was refused with the
explanation that she is too young. The couple ran
their lives with interruptions, in their home in
Jordan. Yihye`s parents, his family and his business
are here.
Four years ago, when Yihye was once again making his
way to his wife and his business, he was arrested on
the Allenby Bridge: Banned from crossing. Why? he
asked. `Take a note, return to the area and go to
the Shin Bet.` Yiyhe went to the Shin Bet and there,
he says, `Captain Yariv` told him: `Help us - and
we`ll help you.` He told them: `Why should I help
you? I have money, work, what deal would I make with
you?` In short: He refused an offer he couldn`t
refuse.
Yariv tried again: `Go to your family, come and
we`ll talk,` and again: `Help us and we`ll help
you.` For the next two years, Yihye was prevented
from traveling to Jordan. He turned to the civil
rights organizations and with the help of his
attorney, to the military court in Beit El.
Meanwhile their daughter Nur was born in Jordan;
Yihye did not see her. Two years later the court
allowed him to travel to Jordan and he once again
visited with his wife and daughter. Nur was already
two years old when she saw her father for the first
time. After two visits - he was refused again.
This time, he says, security people offered to let
him go for four years, without the possibility of
returning. Yihye refused this temporary expulsion.
In 2005 he was arrested on suspicion of attempting
to murder a collaborator. He was released on bail.
Yihye says that it was a false arrest.
Exactly a year ago, in February 2006, they came to
his house to arrest him again. This time he was
placed in administrative detention for half a year,
without a trial, and as is usual in administrative
detentions, the reason is unknown. Yihye is an
avowed Fatah activist, but his attorney, Walid
Zahalka, says that he is not involved in terror.
Half a year ago, he was released from detention.
Last week the judge, Major Dror Sabrensky, ordered
the erasure of the indictment against him, because
of which he was arrested the first time, File
3405/05.
Upon his release from detention, he wanted once
again to travel to Jordan, to visit his wife and
daughters. In Amman, meanwhile, Talin was born, and
he had never seen her. Again they offered to let him
go for four years, without the possibility of
returning, and again he refused. He is unwilling to
cut himself off from his parents and his business
dealings, his home is here. His attorney demanded
one of two things: either he should be allowed to
leave, or his wife should be allowed to enter.
In contacts between his attorney and the
authorities, before turning to the High Court, the
state prosecutor made a creative suggestion: a
meeting on the bridge. Attorney Raanan Giladi of the
State Prosecutor`s Office wrote on January 17, in
the name of the State of Israel:
`Urgent. Re: Pre-High Court of Justice petition
562/06.
1. As you have been informed orally, the state is
willing to allow a meeting between the petitioner
and his family who live in Jordan.
2. The meeting will take place at the Allenby Bridge
terminal, tomorrow, January 18, 2007.
3. We have been informed in writing by the manager
of the Allenby Bridge terminal, Mr. Gideon
Shikloush, that the meeting on the aforesaid date
has been approved and that an appropriate place will
be allocated for the purpose.
4. According to the details you have sent us, the
family members who will be able to meet are as
follows: Yihye, Nibin, Nur and Talin.
5. In case unexpected difficulties arise, we can be
contacted by phone.`
In the morning Yihye got up and went to the bridge
to meet his wife, his elder daughter, whom he had
met twice, and his younger daughter, whom he had
never met. At the terminal he was greeted by Sammy,
who said he would take care of everything. But Sammy
had an exam at Tel Aviv University and he soon
disappeared. Yihye waited for three hours on the
Israeli side, Nibin and the girls waited for three
hours on the Jordanian side, until at about 1 P.M.
they started walking toward one another. Yihye
wanted to buy refreshments for his wife and
daughters in the cafeteria on the Israeli side, but
he was not allowed to do so, he says. They were
placed in the VIP room at the terminal and were
allowed to stay together until 4 P.M. Three hours
after two years, quality time for the parents and
the girls. `Nur knows me. She knows who I am. The
little one doesn`t know who I am,` he said dryly.
When the meeting ended, Yihye wanted to take the
girls with him for a visit to Azariyeh. No problem,
they told him, but after a little while things
became complicated: Nur could stay with her father,
but only starting the next day. Not today. Why?
Because. And how would he come to take her? And how
would she cross the bridge alone? Only Nur, who has
a Palestinian passport, could cross. Little Talin
does not yet have a passport, a Palestinian passport
can be issued only in the territories, and that`s
why she can`t come in. A `catch-22.`
Yihye called Asaf, whose phone number appeared on
the state prosecutor`s letter, in case `unexpected
difficulties arise.` But in vain. Not today and not
Talin. Nibin cried and Nur, who was promised that
she would go with Daddy, also cried. He returned
alone and despondent to his house in Azariyeh,
without his younger daughter, without his elder
daughter.
The spokesman for the Civil Administration, Captain
Tzidki Maman: `From an investigation, it turns out
that for security reasons resident Yihye Bassa is
forbidden by security factors to travel to Jordan.
As far as the entry of his wife and daughters, in
the existing lists we found no documentation of
requests to enter to visit the region. If requests
are submitted in the usual manner, they will be
examined in accordance with the instructions and the
existing policy, with an emphasis on the
humanitarian circumstances.`
Attorney Zahalka dismisses the response of the
spokesman: `That`s nonsense. After all, we asked for
one of the two, either that he be allowed to leave,
or that his wife be allowed to enter.`
The end of the story: Last week Yihye`s mother went
to Jordan, and on Shabbat she returned with her
granddaughter Nur to Azariyeh, for a first visit
with her father. Talin is still refused entry, as is
her mother. Yihye pulls out three pictures from an
envelope: His wife and his two daughters. Now Nur is
playing with the computer in the pleasant and
spacious community center run by her father, which
was built with money from the German government, and
asking where her mother is. This week her father
registered her for the kindergarten in Azariyeh,
until she goes back to her mother in Jordan.
Occasionally the MIRS chirps and asks: `How is the
child doing?` |