Arab-Israeli Journalist under House Arrest after Lebanon Visit

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An Arab Israeli journalist has been arrested after making a visit to Lebanon, his mother said Thursday, on suspicion he could have joined a "hostile organization."

Majd Kayyal, 23, from the northern coastal city of Haifa, crossed into Jordan on March 23 and traveled on to Lebanon for a conference organized by As-Safir newspaper, Israel's Shin Bet domestic security agency said.

A Shin Bet spokeswoman stressed Lebanon is defined as "an enemy country" and Israelis are prohibited from visiting.

"A suspicion arose that he was recruited by a hostile organization, and therefore upon his return on April 12 he was arrested by police and taken to us for questioning," she told Agence France Presse.

Kayyal was later released from custody but placed under house arrest until April 22, when he will stand trial, police spokeswoman Luba Samri said in a statement.

Public radio said Kayyal was suspected of contacts with Hizbullah, an archfoe of Israel.

The spokeswoman said Kayyal had arranged the paperwork to enter Lebanon through the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Kayyal had been already questioned by security services in 2011 for having taken part in an aid flotilla to the besieged Gaza Strip, she said.

Speaking to AFP, Kayyal's mother Suhair Badarni said he worked for As-Safir, and that the family "did not consider Lebanon an enemy country".

"They are trying to prevent us from contact with our Arab surroundings," she said. "Israeli Jewish reporters have gone to Lebanon and Syria who haven’t been investigated."

Kayyal's arrest was placed under a gag order, which an Israeli court lifted on Thursday.

Arab Israeli rights group Adalah said the gag order was to prevent public debate about "the prohibition on Palestinian citizens of Israel from entering numerous Arab countries".

Adalah, which also employs Kayyal, said "the crimes for which Kayyal is accused are essentially carrying out his duty as a journalist, and his rights to freedom of movement and freedom of expression."

The Shin Bet spokeswoman said the agency would decide in coming days how to proceed with the investigation and charges of "entering an enemy country."

Comments 5
Default-user-icon Samer (Guest) 17 April 2014, 15:50

You mean between Beyrouth and Tel Rabi3, which is the real name, the arabic name of tel aviv. No, there wont be a five-lane highway.

Missing phillipo 17 April 2014, 19:12

Unfortunately, there is no way that "enemy" description can be one-sided.
Remember that in the late 1980's Lebanon and Israel signed the preliminary document towards a peace treaty, but this was then torn up by the Lebanese government at the insistance of your then Syrian occupiers.
This agreement could easily have brought about "the possibility of peace and a five-lane highway Beyrouth - Tel Aviv."

Thumb .mowaten. 17 April 2014, 19:55

lol as if we wanted that. you can shove those 5 lanes. no peace with racist, aggressive, and sadistic thieves and murderers.

Thumb kanaanljdid 17 April 2014, 21:05

How was he allowed to enter Lebanon, if he is Israeli?

Thumb kanaanljdid 17 April 2014, 21:09

Lebanese and Israelis are not ennemies. Their respective governments sometimes want wars. But the people of both countries are bound to live in peace, the war between the two country has no basis and is a total non-sense.

I live in France and know personnaly Isralis who are all peace-minded and friendly, we have a very close culture and mentality to them, they dream of visiting Lebanon and invite us in their country, which is so similar to Lebanon.