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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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March 17, 2016
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Bassem
Tamimi is Lying About his Visa Revocation
by Steven Emerson
IPT News
March 17, 2016
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Last week,
Palestinian activist Bassem Tamimi published a letter on his Facebook page showing that
his visa to come to the United States was revoked on March 1.
In a story published Wednesday, the Palestine News Network (PNN)
continued to push his claim that the U.S. action somehow was in retaliation
for a civil lawsuit he and others filed against dozens of Israeli supporters and
companies doing business there. "To stop our effort against the
Israeli occupation, the American consulate revoked my Visa," Tamimi
wrote March 8.
The whole story is a lie. Tamimi would have us believe that American
bureaucracy is so efficient, so nimble, that it processed a visa revocation
overnight. The lawsuit was filed March 7 in Washington, D.C. district
court, the day before Tamimi published it. In addition, the visa revocation
letter is dated March 1.
In order for it to be payback for the lawsuit, the Zionist Occupiers
must have perfected time travel.
In addition, I know Tamimi is spreading a lie because I helped secure
the documents which proved he lied to U.S. officials.
This is a standard question asked of all applicants.
In fact, he has been arrested repeatedly, including a 2010 arrest for
incitement after Tamimi provoked demonstrators to repeatedly throw rocks at
Israeli soldiers in the West Bank. According to Israeli court records,
Tamimi planned the confrontations, first by gathering young men from a
nearby village, encouraging them to throw stones and organizing their stone
throwing . When soldiers approached, he provided reconnaissance to ensure
they would not get caught. He also arranged for ambulances to be immediately
available to the stone throwers in case any of them were injured. He was
convicted on all the charges and sentenced to 30 months in jail.
When Tamimi was in the United States last September on a cross country
bash-Israel tour that was co-sponsored by Amnesty International, an Israeli
source informed me of Tamimi's conviction. I relayed the information to
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). U.S. government agents obtained
Tamimi's arrest and conviction records from Israel.
ICE agents reviewed
Tamimi's visa application and discovered that he lied by not checking a box
indicating he had been arrested before. As a result, an administrative
investigation was immediately initiated into Tamimi's false statements.
The review process took months to complete and resulted in a
determination that Tamimi had lied on his visa application. As is standard
for those who do not disclose their arrest records on their visa or
immigration forms, Tamimi's right to a visa to the United States was
permanently revoked. It culminated in the letter that Tamimi saw fit to
share with the world.
The PNN story dismisses the arrests as "arbitrary" and cited
Tamimi saying the detentions are "ways of Israeli occupation to
silence the Palestinian voice." Tamimi could have been forthcoming
with the U.S. Consulate office and in his visa application, argued the
arrests were improper and let the State Department make an informed
decision.
Instead, he lied. Now he's complaining that he got caught in that lie.
It's an odd lie to tell, given that the U.S. has prosecuted Palestinians, among many others, for similar lies on immigration applications.
But it is not necessarily out of character. In convicting Tamimi of
incitement in 2012, the Israeli judge determined that he "lied to the
court, did not express regret for what he had done and did not take
responsibility for his actions."
During a Sept. 26 appearance in Atlanta, Tamimi's arrest record was not
something to hide, but a means of establishing his bona fides.
"I have been in jail nine times in my life," he said.
He spent five weeks in the United States during September
and October, pushing the campaign to boycott, divest from, and sanction
Israel. Among his stops was a third grade class in Ithaca, N.Y. where he reportedly spoke about the suffering of Palestinian
children.
As the website Legal Insurrection reported in October, Tamimi used his Facebook page to
promote an anti-Semitic blood libel that Israel arrests Palestinian
children "To STEAL THEIR ORGANS." The claim Tamimi reposted
included a picture of a person's torso with a long wound stitched up along
the side.
Tamimi uses children
as tools to instigate confrontations with Israelis, including having his
daughter, dubbed "Shirley Temper," scream at soldiers in hopes of
provoking images that portray them as cruel or brutal.
"When we are able to get a video like this, we can use it to great
effect," he said during the U.S. speaking tour. "When enough
people here see these videos and hear our stories, it can start a kind of
intifada against Israel in the United States."
Tamimi's visa has been revoked permanently. In order to enter the United
States again, he will have to obtain a waiver, which is a benefit rarely
given.
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