Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Palestinian Hajj Pilgrims Return Home After Dispute On Crossing Into Gaza
Yesterday, more than 2000 Palestinian pilgrims returning from the hajj crossed into the Gaza strip after being delayed for five days in Egypt in a dispute over their return route. The International Herald Tribune reports that the Egyptian government, after discussions with Israel, had demanded that the pilgrims return to Gaza via an Israeli border crossing so that Israel could determine whether senior Hamas leaders who were among the pilgrims were bringing back large sums of money to support Hamas in Gaza. The pilgrims insisted on entering Gaza directly from Egypt through the border crossing at Rafah. Eventually Egypt gave in to the pilgrims' demand. Earlier yesterday the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights issued a statement arguing that the delay in permitting the pilgrims to return to Gaza violated international law. The Jerusalem Post earlier this week, however, said that Hamas operatives were suspected of having up to tens of millions of dollars that they were intending to smuggle into Gaza.