Interior Minister Ophir Pines-Paz yesterday appointed an advisory committee to examine Israels immigration laws.
The committees task is to propose an immigration policy for the State of Israel, to examine the relevant legislation including the Law of Return, the Citizenship Law and the Israel Entry Law, and to look into the procedures used by the Population Administration, which implements immigration policy.
The committee, headed by Prof. Amnon Rubinstein, dean of the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya law school, will make its recommendations to a ministerial team led by Pines-Paz. The team, which includes Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, National Security adviser Giora Eiland and the prime ministers legal adviser, will in turn present its position to the government.
The advisory committee is expected to recommend legal methods by which Israel can tighten its immigration laws, since three members of the advisory committeeincluding Eiland and Rubinsteinalready served on a National Security Council (NSC) panel that suggested principles under which immigration restrictions could be made more strict. The panel, which presented its findings to the government about two months ago, sought to maintain a distinct Jewish majority to preserve Israels status as a Jewish and democratic state.
The NSC committee suggested limiting the ability of illegal residents to become legal residents by requiring a certain level of financial standing and connection with Israel, as well as legislating an age limit.
Eilandwho presided over the panel and presented its conclusionsalso suggested the state prevent Bedouin men in the Negev from marrying more than one Palestinian woman in a bid to get them citizenship, and said Israel should reassess its policy of granting Israeli citizenship to children who have only one Israeli parent.
Several weeks after Eiland presented his groups findings, the government approved a law submitted by Pines-Paz that bans the interior minister from granting permanent residency permits to illegal residents. According to the law, illegal aliens who want to live in Israel legally must first leave the country and stay away for an extensive cooling-off period. In addition, foreign spouses of Israelis can no longer become permanent residents as a result of their marriage.
In addition to Eiland and Rubinstein, the dean of the Bar-Ilan University law school, Prof. Yaffa Zilbershats, was also a member of the NSC committee and is serving on the advisory committee appointed yesterday. Other academics on the advisory committee include: Prof. Ariel Porat, dean of the Tel Aviv University law school; Prof. Ariel Bendor, dean of the University of Haifa law school; and Prof. Shlomo Avineri, who teaches political science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Poster Comment:
What if a panel of US judges issued an immigration policy paper to ensure America maintains a distinct European-Caucasian majority to preserve her status as a White democratic state? The one-eyed Jew would howl in outrage and brand the judges as Nazi white supremacists.
Why hasnt this story appeared in US news? Apparently the Zionist/corporate MSM has an interest in suppressing news that would put the Zionist entity in the Mideast in a bad light. When Europeans did this in South Africa, it was all over the news. Why the double standard?