After statehood recognition, Palestinians stuck in limbo in Norway

After statehood recognition, Palestinians stuck in limbo in Norway
The very act of recognition - granted on 28 May, 2024 - means that Oslo no longer considers Palestinians like Adam to be stateless, according to the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) which oversees visa processes. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 15 sec ago

After statehood recognition, Palestinians stuck in limbo in Norway

After statehood recognition, Palestinians stuck in limbo in Norway
  • The very act of recognition — granted on 28 May, 2024 — means that Oslo no longer considers Palestinians like Adam to be stateless
  • “We don’t know what is the reason behind this. Is it to satisfy some parties who are against immigrants or is it for some other reasons?” said Adam

LONDON: When Norway recognized Palestine as a state, Palestinian engineer Adam was thrilled by the show of support, little knowing the move would ultimately derail his family’s dream of winning citizenship in their adopted homeland.
The very act of recognition — granted on 28 May, 2024 — means that Oslo no longer considers Palestinians like Adam to be stateless, according to the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) which oversees visa processes.
And this change has upended Adam’s dreams and left him dumbfounded by what has turned out to be a poisoned chalice.
“We don’t know what is the reason behind this. Is it to satisfy some parties who are against immigrants or is it for some other reasons?” said Adam, who wanted to use a pseudonym for fear of retaliation.
“You support us, which is appreciated. At the same time, you are punishing Palestinians when you recognize their state. It doesn’t make any sense,” the father of two told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a video interview from Norway.
Legal and migrant charities worry that Norway may also have set a dangerous precedent — denying millions of other Palestinians who live outside their homeland the protections that are routinely granted to the stateless.
Britain, France and Australia were among the latest nations to officially recognize the Palestinian state last month, with leaders hoping the move would pressure Israel to end its devastating two-year military campaign in Gaza.
A ceasefire in Gaza was announced on Thursday as part of the first phase of a US-backed peace deal to end a conflict that has killed more than 67,000 Palestinians.
Israel launched its assault on Gaza after Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and seizing 251 hostages.
Arab countries say the peace plan must lead to eventual independence for a Palestinian state. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says this will never happen.
Experts meanwhile worry that the pickup in recognition for a Palestinian state — more than 150 countries have now made the move — may perversely curtail the rights of some of the 7.6 million Palestinians living outside the occupied territories.

LEGAL LIMBO
Adam would have been able to apply for citizenship in 2026 under rules that make stateless people eligible for naturalization after living in country for three years.
Children born stateless can become citizens after one year.
But that all changed after Norway backed statehood.
The UDI says Palestinians who are on the civil registry in the West Bank, Gaza or East Jerusalem and assigned ID cards can no longer apply for Norwegian citizenship as stateless persons.
Born in the West Bank, Adam and his family all have Palestinian documents which means they now need to wait eight years — like any other migrant — before they can apply for citizenship, leaving them in legal limbo.
Nor does it just affect Palestinians in Norway.
“We are worried about our people in other countries because these countries may do exactly what Norway did,” said Adam.
The Norwegian Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion, which oversees immigration and welfare policies, did not respond to a request for comment before the publication of this article.
The European Network on Statelessness (ENS), a civil society alliance, said Palestinians who have no other nationality should retain protections as their homeland remains under Israeli occupation.
Patricia Cabral, legal policy coordinator at ENS, says other authorities could follow Norway’s example — noting that Palestinians in Bulgaria and Hungary had already seen their rights curbed by statehood recognition.
“Stateless Palestinians, as other stateless people, should be granted residency rights, access to economic and social rights, and a facilitated route to naturalization,” Cabral said. “They shouldn’t be kept in limbo for a long time.”

STATEHOOD?
Despite growing political support, a Palestinian state currently lacks the core elements of a state, Cabral said.
These would include control over borders and a population registry, the ability to issue identity and travel documents, and the right to decide how nationality is passed on, she said.
As it stands, Israel restricts access into Palestinian territories for goods, investment and educational or cultural exchanges.
There are no Palestinian airports.
The landlocked West Bank can be reached only through Israel or through the Israeli-controlled border with Jordan.
Israel now controls all access to the Gaza Strip since capturing Gaza’s buffer zone on the border with Egypt last year.
As part of the ceasefire deal, it is supposed to eventually withdraw troops, although timings remain unclear.
“You recognize Palestine as a state, but does Palestine actually have a nationality law? They don’t,” said Marek Linha, senior legal adviser at the Norwegian Organization for Asylum Seekers charity, which is supporting affected Palestinians.
“There are legal questions that need to be carefully considered, and unfortunately, it has not been done as far as I can see, or from what is publicly available (in Norway),” he said in a phone interview.
Adam said he and his wife have abandoned plans for a third child since any newborn would now start life stateless.
Palestinians typically need to travel to Palestinian territories to give birth and get a birth certificate, plus other documents, since most embassies cannot issue them.
Adam said he fears one of his children’s passports might expire by the time they can apply for citizenship, which means they would need to travel to the West Bank for renewal.
“Norway is pushing us to do this. I am forced to go to Palestine to renew my documents. We have to go to Palestine if we have a new baby. It means exposing our young children to dangerous and traumatic experiences in conflict zones,” he said.
“We both work. We have an income. We are not looking for any social support from the government. We’re looking for stability.”


UK govt must do ‘much more’ to explain Palestine Action ban: Labour peer

UK govt must do ‘much more’ to explain Palestine Action ban: Labour peer
Updated 5 sec ago

UK govt must do ‘much more’ to explain Palestine Action ban: Labour peer

UK govt must do ‘much more’ to explain Palestine Action ban: Labour peer
  • Party’s ex-deputy leader: Govt has to ‘uphold the right to free speech and the right of protest’
  • It appears instead to be ‘arresting octogenarian vicars who are worried about the awful situation in Gaza’

LONDON: A peer with the UK’s ruling Labour Party has demanded that government ministers do “much more” to explain why Palestine Action was banned as a terrorist organization.

Harriet Harman, the party’s former deputy leader, was speaking after the latest demonstration in London in support of Palestine Action, which saw around 500 people detained.

She told the Sky News “Electoral Dysfunction” podcast that the government has a “number of incredibly important duties,” including upholding freedom of speech, and that it appears instead to be “arresting octogenarian vicars who are worried about the awful situation in Gaza.”

The government has to “support and uphold the right to free speech and the right of protest,” she said, adding: “People have felt so horrified. We all have about the devastating loss of life and suffering in Gaza. And so it’s right that people are allowed to protest.”

Palestine Action was proscribed in the UK under terrorism legislation after a series of incidents, including a break-in at a Royal Air Force base that saw red paint sprayed on two military aircraft in July.

“They’ve got to actually be much clearer in why Palestine Action is a terrorist group and that they’re justified in prescribing them and making them illegal,” Harman said.


Refugees in Ethiopia risk losing food aid: UN agency

Refugees in Ethiopia risk losing food aid: UN agency
Updated 9 min 59 sec ago

Refugees in Ethiopia risk losing food aid: UN agency

Refugees in Ethiopia risk losing food aid: UN agency
  • According to the agency, the latest cuts mean refugees are now receiving fewer than 1,000 calories a day in food aid — less than half the recommended 2,100 daily intake
  • The director of the program (WFP) in Ethiopia, Zlatan Milisic, said it needed to raise about $230 million to sustain humanitarian operations for the next six months

ADDIS ABABA: The World Food Programme is on the brink of suspending food aid for millions of refugees in Ethiopia due to cuts in international aid, the UN agency said on Friday.
Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous country, hosts many refugees from neighboring Sudan and South Sudan, and also has internally displaced residents fleeing internal conflicts.
The director of the program (WFP) in Ethiopia, Zlatan Milisic, said it needed to raise about $230 million to sustain humanitarian operations for the next six months.
“Without immediate new funding, WFP could be forced to completely suspend food assistance for all refugees in Ethiopia in the coming months,” he said in a statement.
Reductions in foreign humanitarian aid by the United States and other Western countries this year have worsened funding issues in many developing countries.
WFP said this month it was forced to cut food rations for 780,000 refugees in 27 camps across Ethiopia.
“We are making impossible choices,” Milisic said.
“These reductions are just another step toward stopping food distributions completely, putting the lives of those we currently assist at risk.”
According to the agency, the latest cuts mean refugees are now receiving fewer than 1,000 calories a day in food aid — less than half the recommended 2,100 daily intake.
Ethiopia is receiving a surge of refugees from neighboring Sudan, gripped by civil war since April 2023, and South Sudan, long troubled by instability.
The Horn of African nation is also facing internal conflicts, particularly in its two most populous regions, which have displaced tens of thousands of people.
“Every ration cut is a child left hungrier, a mother forced to skip meals, a family pushed closer to the edge,” Milisic said.
In April, WFP said it had halted aid for 650,000 malnourished women and children in Ethiopia.
From January to October, it provided life-saving assistance to 4.7 million vulnerable people across the country.


Powerful earthquake off southern Philippines kills 5 people, causes damages and tsunami evacuations

Powerful earthquake off southern Philippines kills 5 people, causes damages and tsunami evacuations
Updated 24 min 45 sec ago

Powerful earthquake off southern Philippines kills 5 people, causes damages and tsunami evacuations

Powerful earthquake off southern Philippines kills 5 people, causes damages and tsunami evacuations
  • At least five people were killed, including two patients who died of heart attacks at a hospital during the earthquake and a resident who was hit by debris in Mati city in Davao Oriental
  • A tsunami warning that set off evacuations in six coastal provinces near Davao Oriental was later lifted without any major waves being detected, chief government seismologist Teresito Bacolcol said

MANILA: A 7.4-magnitude earthquake Friday morning off the southern Philippines killed at least five people, set off landslides, damaged hospitals and schools and prompted evacuations of coastal areas nearby because of a tsunami warning, which was later lifted.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., facing his latest natural disaster after a recent deadly quake and back-to-back storms, said the potential damage was being assessed and rescue teams and relief operations were being prepared and would be deployed when it was safe to do so.
The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said that it was expecting damage and aftershocks from the temblor, which was centered at sea about 43 kilometers (27 miles) east of Manay town in Davao Oriental province and was caused by movement in the Philippine Trench at a depth of 23 kilometers (14 miles).
At least five people were killed, including two patients who died of heart attacks at a hospital during the earthquake and a resident who was hit by debris in Mati city in Davao Oriental, Ednar Dayanghirang, regional director of the government’s Office of Civil Defense, told The Associated Press by telephone.
Two villagers died and several others were rescued with injuries by army troops and civilian volunteers in a landslide set off by the quake in a remote gold-mining village in Pantukan town in Davao de Oro province near Davao Oriental, Dayanghirang said.
Office of Civil Defense deputy administrator Bernardo Rafaelito Alejandro IV said that several buildings sustained cracks in their walls, including an international airport in Davao city, but it remained operational without any flights being canceled, Alejandro said.
“I was driving my car when it suddenly swayed and I saw power lines swaying wildly. People darted out of houses and buildings as the ground shook and electricity came off,” Jun Saavedra, a disaster mitigation officer of Governor Generoso town in Davao Oriental, told The Associated Press by cellphone.
“We’ve had earthquakes in the past, but this was the strongest,” Saavedra said, adding that the intense ground swaying caused cracks in several buildings, including a high school, where about 50 students were brought to a hospital by ambulance after sustaining bruises, fainting or becoming dizzy because of the quake.
Governor Generoso is a town about 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Manay, where school classes in all levels were also suspended.
Children evacuated schools in Davao city, which has about 5.4 million people and is the biggest city near the epicenter, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) west of Davao Oriental province.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Honolulu said that small waves were detected on the coasts of the Philippines and Indonesia before the threat passed about two hours after the quake. It said that small sea fluctuations may continue.
A tsunami warning that set off evacuations in six coastal provinces near Davao Oriental was later lifted without any major waves being detected, chief government seismologist Teresito Bacolcol said.
Indonesia’s Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency said that small tsunami waves were detected in North Sulawesi province with heights ranging from 3.5 to 17 centimeters (1.3 to 6.7 inches) in Melonguane, Beo, Essang and Ganalo in Talaud Islands districts.
The Philippines is still recovering from a Sept. 30 earthquake with a 6.9 magnitude that left at least 74 people dead and displaced thousands of people in the central province of Cebu, particularly in Bogo city and outlying towns.
The archipelago also is lashed by about 20 typhoons and storms each year, making disaster response a major task of the government and volunteer groups.
Also Friday, an earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.0 struck Friday off the coast of Papua New Guinea. The US Geological Survey said that it was centered in the Bismarck Sea 414 kilometers (257 miles) northeast of Lae, the South Pacific island nation’s second-most populous city.
Lae police official Mary Jane Huafilong said that no damage was reported.


Religious party protest triggers road closures, disrupts mobile services in Pakistani capital

Religious party protest triggers road closures, disrupts mobile services in Pakistani capital
Updated 35 min 2 sec ago

Religious party protest triggers road closures, disrupts mobile services in Pakistani capital

Religious party protest triggers road closures, disrupts mobile services in Pakistani capital
  • The TLP party called for a march on Islamabad to stage a protest outside US embassy in solidarity with Palestinians
  • Authorities have since placed shipping containers on key roads, amid reports of arrests of dozens of TLP supporters

ISLAMABAD: A protest announced by the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) religious party has paralyzed the Pakistani capital of Islamabad and other cities, with authorities closing roads amid a disruption in mobile phone services.

The TLP this week called for a march on the federal capital where it planned to stage a protest outside the United States (US) embassy in solidarity with Palestinians.

Authorities raided the party headquarters in Lahore late Wednesday in a bid to keep the TLP from following through on its plans. The raid resulted in clashes that continued on Thursday.

Shipping containers have since been placed on key roads in Islamabad, Lahore and other cities to block the protesters, amid reports of arrests of dozens of TLP supporters.

“All types of heavy traffic will be banned from entering Islamabad until further notice,” the city’s traffic police said on X, sharing alternate traffic routes for public.

School administration in the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad returned students to homes early Friday in view of the law-and-order situation, according to school association.

The Ministry of Interior directed the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) to suspend 3G and 4G services in Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

A directive dated October 9 stated the ministry had “accorded approval to suspend 3G/4G services in the twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi, starting from 12am tonight till further orders.” It directed the PTA to take “further necessary action” in this regard in coordination with local administration and police in Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

The TLP has previously staged protests, most prominently in support of blasphemy laws and to call on the government to cut diplomatic ties with Western nations where Holy Qur’an desecrations have taken place.

Some of these protests turned violent and continued for days.

In Oct. last year, police in Karachi arrested more than a dozen TLP activists and members of a local human rights group for staging separate demonstrations over a blasphemy case, amid a ban on public gatherings.

In July 2024, hundreds of TLP supporters had camped at the Faizabad interchange connecting Islamabad and Rawalpindi to demand the Pakistani government officially boycott Israeli products and declare Israeli PM a ‘terrorist.’ The protest continued for a week and was ended after talks with government.


Burkina Faso rejects proposal to accept deportees from the US

Burkina Faso rejects proposal to accept deportees from the US
Updated 34 min 27 sec ago

Burkina Faso rejects proposal to accept deportees from the US

Burkina Faso rejects proposal to accept deportees from the US
  • Citing a US diplomatic note accusing Burkinabe nationals of not complying with visa usage rules, Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré called the move a possible “pressure tactic” and said, “Burkina Faso is a land of dignity, not deportation”

DAKAR: Burkina Faso says it has refused a proposal from the Trump administration to accept deportees from the United States.
The West African country was asked whether it would accept non-citizens expelled by the US, in addition to its own nationals, Foreign Minister Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré said Thursday on national television.
“Naturally, this proposal, which we deemed indecent at the time, is totally contrary to the value of dignity which is part of the very essence of the vision of Capt. Ibrahim Traoré,” he said, referring to the country’s military ruler.
The remark came only a few hours after the US Embassy in the capital Ouagadougou suspended most visa services for Burkina Faso residents, redirecting applications to its embassy in neighboring Togo. The embassy did not give a reason for the move.
Citing a US diplomatic note accusing Burkinabe nationals of not complying with visa usage rules, Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré called the move a possible “pressure tactic” and said, “Burkina Faso is a land of dignity, not deportation.”
The US Embassy in Ouagadougou and Department of Homeland Security didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
More than 40 deportees have been sent to Africa since July after the Trump administration struck largely secretive agreements with at least five African nations to take migrants under a new third-country deportation program. Rights groups and others have protested the program.
The US has sent deportees to the small African nation of Eswatini, South Sudan, Rwanda and Ghana. It also has an agreement with Uganda, though no deportations there have been announced.
Six deportees are still detained in an unspecified facility in South Sudan, while Rwanda hasn’t said where it is holding seven deportees. Eleven of the 14 deportees sent to Ghana last month sued the government there for holding them in what they described as terrible conditions at a military camp on the outskirts of the capital, Accra.
Human Rights Watch said last month the Trump administration offered financial incentives to some African countries to accept deportees. The rights group said it reviewed written agreements showing Eswatini will receive $5.1 million in US funding for migration and border management while Rwanda will receive $7.5 million.