ianstone
06-05-2010, 06:33 PM
Egypt targets marriages to Israelis http://english.aljazeera.net/mritems/Images//2010/1/6/20101622257740580_5.jpgSaturday's verdict comes as Egypt-Israel relations remain strained by the Palestinian issue [Reuters]Egypt's supreme court has upheld a decision to strip citizenship from Egyptian men who wed Israeli women if the marriage poses a threat to national security.
With ties between the two countries strained, particularly over the situation in the Gaza Strip, Saturday's verdict is being seen as a reflection of Egyptian sentiment towards Israel.
Mohammed al-Husseini, a judge with the supreme administrative court, said Egypt's interior ministry must ask the country's cabinet to take the necessary steps to strip Egyptian men married to Israeli women, and their children, of citizenship.
"The court asks the ministry of interior to present all the marriages to the cabinet to examine ... Each case should be investigated separately and with consideration to personal freedoms and the nation's security," he said.
Nabil al-Wahsh, a lawyer in the case, said he wanted to prevent the creation of a generation who are "disloyal to Egypt and the Arab world".
The children of such marriages "should not be allowed to perform their military service", he said.
No chance of appeal
The supreme administrative court's decision cannot be challenged.
Last year, a lower court ruled that the interior ministry needed to look into the cases of Egyptian men married to Israeli women, and their children, in order to "take the necessary steps to strip them of their nationality".
The interior and foreign ministries had appealed against the decision, saying the matter should be put before parliament rather than decided by the courts.
"The case has highlighted the divide between the official Egyptian stance on peace with Israel versus the real sentiment on the street of the Arab world's most populous nation," Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh reported from Cairo, the Egyptian capital.
Palestine factor
Egypt signed a peace deal with Israel in 1979, making it the first Arab country to do so.
"Popular sentiment [in Egypt] is primarily determined by the Palestinian situation," our correspondent said.
"And this has given more room to lawsuits filed in Egyptian courts against anything that appears remotely sympathetic to Israel or its citizens.
"It's not clear whether the Egyptian government will indeed enforce the verdict.
"But for now, the verdict has quenched the thirst of many in an increasingly angry population seeking action against Israel."
Religious edict
In 2005, Nasr Farid Wasel, a former grand mufti, issued a religious edict, or fatwa, saying Muslim Egyptians may not marry Israeli nationals, "whether Arab, Muslim, or Christian".
The possibility of a Jewish spouse was not mentioned.
Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi, the late grand sheikh of Cairo's Al-Azhar, Sunni Islam's premier institution and oldest university, had said that while marriage between an Egyptian man and an Israeli woman was not religiously forbidden, the government had the right to strip the man of his citizenship for marrying a woman from "an enemy state".
While there is not formal data on the number of Egyptians married to Israelis, some Egyptian deputies estimate the number to be 15,000.
Several thousand Egyptians who lived in Iraq moved to Israel in search of work after the 1990 Gulf War and married Israeli women.
The Arab world has gone mental,
crazed, warped and doolally tap !
Don't they understand love, free will
and tolerance. I think it is time for my medication.
With ties between the two countries strained, particularly over the situation in the Gaza Strip, Saturday's verdict is being seen as a reflection of Egyptian sentiment towards Israel.
Mohammed al-Husseini, a judge with the supreme administrative court, said Egypt's interior ministry must ask the country's cabinet to take the necessary steps to strip Egyptian men married to Israeli women, and their children, of citizenship.
"The court asks the ministry of interior to present all the marriages to the cabinet to examine ... Each case should be investigated separately and with consideration to personal freedoms and the nation's security," he said.
Nabil al-Wahsh, a lawyer in the case, said he wanted to prevent the creation of a generation who are "disloyal to Egypt and the Arab world".
The children of such marriages "should not be allowed to perform their military service", he said.
No chance of appeal
The supreme administrative court's decision cannot be challenged.
Last year, a lower court ruled that the interior ministry needed to look into the cases of Egyptian men married to Israeli women, and their children, in order to "take the necessary steps to strip them of their nationality".
The interior and foreign ministries had appealed against the decision, saying the matter should be put before parliament rather than decided by the courts.
"The case has highlighted the divide between the official Egyptian stance on peace with Israel versus the real sentiment on the street of the Arab world's most populous nation," Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh reported from Cairo, the Egyptian capital.
Palestine factor
Egypt signed a peace deal with Israel in 1979, making it the first Arab country to do so.
"Popular sentiment [in Egypt] is primarily determined by the Palestinian situation," our correspondent said.
"And this has given more room to lawsuits filed in Egyptian courts against anything that appears remotely sympathetic to Israel or its citizens.
"It's not clear whether the Egyptian government will indeed enforce the verdict.
"But for now, the verdict has quenched the thirst of many in an increasingly angry population seeking action against Israel."
Religious edict
In 2005, Nasr Farid Wasel, a former grand mufti, issued a religious edict, or fatwa, saying Muslim Egyptians may not marry Israeli nationals, "whether Arab, Muslim, or Christian".
The possibility of a Jewish spouse was not mentioned.
Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi, the late grand sheikh of Cairo's Al-Azhar, Sunni Islam's premier institution and oldest university, had said that while marriage between an Egyptian man and an Israeli woman was not religiously forbidden, the government had the right to strip the man of his citizenship for marrying a woman from "an enemy state".
While there is not formal data on the number of Egyptians married to Israelis, some Egyptian deputies estimate the number to be 15,000.
Several thousand Egyptians who lived in Iraq moved to Israel in search of work after the 1990 Gulf War and married Israeli women.
The Arab world has gone mental,
crazed, warped and doolally tap !
Don't they understand love, free will
and tolerance. I think it is time for my medication.