INFORMATION FOR TRAVELERS
Warden Messages
Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Travel Warning - 3/23/2004
24 March 2004
This Travel Warning is being updated in light of the recent killing
of HAMAS leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in Gaza. The Department of State
continues to urge all U.S. citizens to depart Gaza as early as it
is safe to do so, and to advise U.S. citizens to defer travel to
Israel, the West Bank and Gaza due to current safety and security
concerns. This Travel Warning supersedes the Travel Warning issued
October 20, 2003.
The Department of State warns U.S. citizens to depart Gaza as soon
as it is safe to do so and to defer travel to Israel, the West Bank
and Gaza due to current safety and security concerns. In the aftermath
of the killing of HAMAS leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, a HAMAS spokesman
has threatened revenge against Israel and U.S. interests. Moreover,
the o ngoing violence has caused numerous civilian deaths and injuries,
including to some American tourists, students and residents, as
well as to U.S. Mission personnel. The potential for further terrorist
acts remains high. The situation in Israel, Jerusalem, Gaza and
the West Bank remains extremely volatile with continuing terrorist
attacks, confrontations and clashes. The Department of State recommended
all U.S. citizens depart Gaza following the lethal terrorist attack
on U.S. Mission personnel in Gaza on October 15, 2003.
American citizens who remain in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza
despite this and earlier warnings are urged to continue to review
their personal security situations and to take those actions they
deem appropriate to ensure their well-being. Private Americans are
encouraged to follow the precautions detailed below and remain in
close communication with the American Embassy in Tel Aviv and the
American Consulate General in Jerusalem for more detailed information.
American citizens residing in the West Bank and Jerusalem should
consider relocating to a safe location.
American citizens should avoid, to the extent possible, public
places such as restaurants and cafes, shopping and market areas
and malls, pedestrian zones, public buses and bus stops, or other
crowded venues and the areas around them. Americans should also
avoid large crowds and demonstrations. Roads designed for Israeli
settlers, including in East Jerusalem, have been the sites of frequent
shooting attacks and roadside explosives, sometimes resulting in
death or injury. U.S. Embassy and Consulate employees and their
families have been prohibited from using public buses throughout
Israel, the Jerusalem municipality, the West Bank and Gaza.
U.S. Government personnel in Israel, Jerusalem, the West Bank and
Gaza are under tight security controls, including prohibition of
non-official travel to the West Bank and Gaza. Official travel to
the West Bank and Gaza is conducted only for specific mission needs,
and under the auspices of U.S. Government security personnel. Occasionally,
U.S. Government personnel are prohibited from traveling to sections
of Jerusalem and parts of Israel, depending on prevailing security
conditions.
As a result of ongoing military activity in the West Bank and Gaza,
sections of those areas have been declared closed military zones.
The Government of Israel may deny entry at Ben Gurion Airport or
at a land border to persons it believes might travel to closed
areas in the West Bank or Gaza or to persons the Israeli authorities
believe may sympathize with the Palestinian cause and are seeking
to meet with Palestinian officials. Closed areas in the West Bank
and Gaza have been subject to intense shelling and firing. In some
instances, Americans have been wounded and their property damaged.
Major cities in the West Bank are often placed under Israeli military
curfew. All persons in areas under curfew should remain indoors
or risk arrest or injury. Americans have been killed, seriously
injured, detained, and deported as a result of encounters with Israeli
Defense Forces operations in Gaza and the West Bank. Due to the
closures and fighting, provision of medical and humanitarian care
has been severely delayed in those areas.
In addition, dual Palestinian-American citizens may encounter difficulties,
or be barred from, entering and/or departing Israel, the West Bank
and Gaza, especially during times of Israeli closures. Americans
who hold Palestinian ID numbers should consult the Embassy or Consulate
for the most recent information before attempting to cross relevant
borders. These restrictions can change frequently and without any
advance notice.
During times when the closures and curfews are lifted, in order
to depart Israel via Ben Gurion Airport, Palestinian-Americans must
apply for an Israeli transit permit. Except in humanitarian or special
interest cases, Israeli authorities are unlikely to issue this permit.
In this event, and notwithstanding the restrictions mentioned above,
travelers must depart via land crossings and may experience lengthy
delays. All travelers who enter or travel in Gaza or the West Bank
should expect delays and difficulties at Israeli military checkpoints
located throughout those areas, and should exercise particular care
when approaching and traveling through checkpoints. Travelers should
also be aware they might not be allowed passage through the checkpoints.
From time to time, the Embassy and Consulate General may temporarily
suspend public services to review their security posture. Travel
restrictions on official travel into the West Bank and Gaza impair
the Embassys and Consulate Generals ability to render
emergency services to American citizens in the West Bank and Gaza.
U.S. citizens who require emergency services may telephone the Consulate
General in Jerusalem at (972) (2) 622-7230 or the Embassy in Tel
Aviv at (972) (3) 519-7355.
For further information on travel to Israel, the West Bank and
Gaza, please consult the Department of State's latest
consular information sheet for Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza,
the Worldwide Caution
and Middle East
and North Africa Public Announcement. The most up-to-date information
on security conditions can also be accessed at http://www.usembassy-israel.org.il
or http://www.uscongen-jerusalem.org.
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