11 March 2014
Source: Middle East Monitor
Border officials in Tunisia have refused entry to twenty Israeli
passengers of a Norwegian cruise ship, the Jade, which docked in La
Goulette on Sunday. A spokesman for the Miami-based Norwegian Cruise
Line said that "a small number" of Israeli passport holders were refused
permission to go ashore due to a "last minute" decision by the Tunisian
government.
According to an official in the Tunisian tourism ministry, the
visitors were prevented from disembarking because of "a procedural
problem" and that they did not have visas. Interior Minister Mohamed
Al-Arawi told AFP that the Israeli passengers did not enter Tunisia
because the necessary procedures had not been completed.
The relationship between Israel and most Arab states is sensitive.
The "normalisation" of ties with the Zionist state is not accepted by
most Arab governments.
Tunisia hosted the Palestine Liberation Organisation from its 1982
expulsion from Lebanon until it moved to the occupied West Bank and Gaza
Strip in the early nineties during the Oslo peace process. In 1996,
Tunisia and Israel each opened interest sections in the other country,
but Tunis froze relations in 2000 in protest at the Israeli response to
the second Palestinian intifada. The uprising began after the late
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon entered Al-Aqsa Mosque with a couple
of thousand security officers.
Link: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/africa/10239-israeli-tourists-refused-entry-into-tunisia.
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