I absolutely agree that this is a complicated matter and would differ from country to country. the thing is the foundations goal of expanding in the "global south" does place some priority on the middle east, it would be rather unfortunate that most of the people might not be able to make it to the conference. I also understand that the organizers are making a great effort to be as inclusive as possible, but I think we have to realize its going to be what its going to be. Many people might not be able to attend this year. Its not only an issue for the resident but also for people who travel or work in countries which might discriminate against an Israeli stamp on their passport.
I am curious if the Israeli embassies are going to be lenient in mid-eastern countries and are aware of the issue, do you have their support? I would also like to ask about the stamp being on a separate page? doesnt the Visa have to be on the passport itself, are you talking about two separate things? Regards Theo On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 11:20 PM, Yaroslav M. Blanter <[email protected]>wrote: > > > I believe the "difficulty" of getting a visa varies from one country > > to another, but even with the help of the bidding team, an issue will > > remain unresolved, that is: Some countries do not allow persons with > > an Israeli stamp on their passports, to enter their borders. The list > > includes: Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria, UAE, Turkey ..and other > > destinations. I am not sure if there are exceptions for this rule in > > those countries. It is a complicated situation on political and > > ethical levels. > > Turkey is no problem, Turkish citizens can, may and do visit Israel. Also, > Jordan, Egypt, Morocco, Tunesia, and Mauretania are no problem. Algeria I > would need to check. > > The list of countries which would never let a visitor in with the Israeli > stamp (or Jordan or Egypt stamp in correponding checkpoints) is (I believe > this is a full list but one needs to check the lates updates; not sure > about Irak for instance): > Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Yemen, > Qatar, Sudan, Lybia. Citizens of these countries who openly visit Israel > break the laws of these countries and can face prosecution. > > There are other countries which would let a foreigner with an Israeli > stamp in but not let their citizens to visit Israel. This list needs to be > compiled from the database but I believe it includes at least Malaysia and > Indonesia. > > Cheers > Yaroslav > > _______________________________________________ > foundation-l mailing list > [email protected] > Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l > _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
