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Silencing its critics? Israel to deny Human Rights Watch visas over ‘bias’

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Palestinian police remove equipment from the rubble of the police station in the West Bank town of Ramallah that Israeli forces bombed in 2001. Photo: AP
Agence France-Presse

Israel will stop issuing work visas to Human Rights Watch staff, the NGO said on Friday, with the Jewish state accusing the group of being “fundamentally biased” against it.

The New York-based watchdog, which has written critical reports about the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories, applied months ago for a visa for its Israel and Palestine director, American citizen Omar Shakir.

On February 20, Israeli authorities informed it the request had been rejected because HRW is “not a real human rights group”, the group said in a statement.

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Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon confirmed the decision.

HRW, he said, had “demonstrated time and again it is a fundamentally biased and anti-Israeli organisation with a clear hostile agenda”. But Nahshon added that the group was not banned and its Israeli and Palestinian employees would still be permitted to work in Israel and issue reports.

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He asked: “Why should we give working visas to people whose only purpose is to besmirch us and to attack us?”

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