Visa Regulations In The Arab World

Filed under: Arab Societies, Jordan, Tunisia — Eman at 4:44 pm on Thursday, March 8, 2007

I’ve always believed that it’s such a shame for Arab countries to request visas from each other. I mean, we call for an Arab union, we dream of an Arab unity on all levels of life, but while dreaming and calling, we still stick to every single separation factor that helps only spread more division among us.

One of the most effective forms of separation is the request for a VISA; since it highlights borders and empowers the barriers that were created by imperialism. Yet for some reason, Arabs insist on holding to the annoying demands of visas, making them a must to legally seek permission for entering another Arab country. And by that, Arab countries –with the exception of really FEW countries- are treating each other as foreigners not as countries of brotherhood “dying” for unity.

Today I came across some news about Visa regulations in Jordan. Apparently, an Interior Ministry regulation requiring nationals from several East European and Mediterranean countries to obtain a visa before entering the Kingdom was rescinded. [Source:The Jordan Times].

Now my main concern revolves around the part regarding the “Mediterranean” countries, Tunisia being one of them.
Jordan requires no visas from Tunisians BEFORE entering the Kingdom. Tunisian nationals are issued visas upon arrival (i.e. at the airport of Jordan). Which I consider an extremely friendly gesture. I mean if visas have to be requested, they might as well be –relatively- easily given if we really want to show our tendency towards unity.
And therefore I’m relieved that
Jordan will stick to its policy in this regard.

Anyway, to make sure to stick on the safe side, my husband always requests a visa before flying to Jordan. He submits his demand, and he gets his visa by noon of the same day with no complications whatsoever.
While I, on the other hand, even though I’m married to a Tunisian, and even though I have my residency papers all legally and officially defined, would go through an amazing deal of trouble just to get my own parents a visa to visit me for a short while… if they were finally given the visa that is!
I don’t claim it’s unjustifiable or wrong, because I know the horrible time we’re living and the security measurements each country has to take to protect itself and its civilians from any form of threat or danger. I’m just wishing, if we still insist on this whole visa thing, that when a person has provided all requested official paper work and it turned out to be all legally approved and correct, that this person will get the same treatment his/her country provides for the nationals of the country (s)he resides in…

5 Comments »

Comment by Muh'd M. Mansour

March 8, 2007 @ 5:50 pm

I think you are right, I don’t know why they do that to us.
I have to get a visa every time I try to visit my family in Kuwait, why is that I was born there lived almost my entire life in there. but you know the rules it should not be broken.

Comment by Jimbo

March 9, 2007 @ 2:59 am

Damn! I just wiped out my scathing–and lengthy–comment on visas, border controls and the how blonds are whisked through U.S. customs and immigration and Semites are often made to s u f f e r. (It seems to be regarded as even more fun if they’ve got little kids with them who can be made to cry. Thinking of a particularly ugly incident I saw at a southern U.S. airport last year.)

Oh well. My fulsome and rich comment will be even better when I rewrite it. In an email to you. Tomorrow.

Thank you for your delightful email(s), Eman, which safely reached our shores today. Will write you tomorrow. Now though, instead of further tempting fate and risking depixelation, time for a cognac and to bed.

Cheers,

J.

Comment by nuh ibn zbigniew gondek al kitab

March 14, 2007 @ 6:57 pm

As salaam alaikum.

I am sure that most of you know about the struggle of Manal and Nour, the mother and child being held in a Israeli prison.

The following is a poem I wrote about this issue please share it with everyone you know:

http://nuhgondek.blogspot.com/2007/03/poem-in-solidarity.html

Wa salaama,

nuh ibn

Comment by Dalia

March 19, 2007 @ 6:31 am

I don’t even know where to start on this issue..

Being only a recent Jordanian-passport holder, and married to a Palestinian-passport holder, together have seen the ugliest face of visas/airports/immgiration in the Arab world.

Just some examples of our collective travel experiences:
- 14 hours in the Dubai airport upon arrival (WITH A VALID VISA NEVERTHELESS)
- 12 hours in the Jordanian border entry (from Saudi) - even as a Jordanian passport holder
- 4+ hours in Cairo airport - multiple times
- Lost job opportunities because residence visas in gulf states could not be issued to certain nationalities
- Countless refused visas worldwide
- Not being able to travel to many Arab countries (including Lebanon for Duri - which he lived in for 8 years!)

The list goes on and on..

One thing we both agreed on however, was the fact that we would NEVER expose our children to this if we could. This was the reason having Sanad in the US was not even a debatable issue for us.. Or that applying for immigration to Canada was a sure thing..

It kills us that we have to resort to working to obtain foreign (western) passports for our family, but given what we have experienced, we do not even question the ‘morality’ or ‘ethics’ of the situation.

I could go on and on about this. Excuse my babbling..

It just makes me feel ASHAMED just to think about the whole Arab visa situation..

Maybe we would expect this from other countries, but you would kind of wish that Arabs would be more sympathetic to each other.

Who am I kidding?!?! Duri can now travel to Europe, US, Canada, Asia but cannot travel to many countries in the Arab world!!

Including JORDAN by the way!!! Last time he had a visa (by wasta) before going to Jordan and was asked to leave on the same flight he came in!! :)

Belad al 3orb Awtanee :)

Comment by Antoun

May 6, 2007 @ 8:57 pm

Arab unity is a myth. The pan-Arabist experiment of Syria and Egypt becoming the United Arab Republic, which quickly failed, is proof of that. Also many people consider themselves only linguistically Arab. And while in Paris I met an Algerian woman from a small village in that country who knew no Arabic, and only spoke Kabyle, a Berber dialect. Some Lebanese consider themselves to be Phoenicians, and Egyptians look distinctly Egyptian, very much like those people who see in ancient Egyptian art.

But here’s one for good measure. The Arab media gives more attention to Palestinian casualties in the Israeli occupied territories, and quickly (and rightfully so) condemns Israel’s indiscriminate murder of Palestinian civilians. Yet the same Arab media will not utter a word of condemnation when Iraq’s Shi’ites are murdered indiscriminately, and instead blames the U.S. occupation. When Israel murdered Shi’ites in Lebanon, Arab reaction was very subdued compared to loud condemnations when Palestinians are the victims. Are Iraqi Shi’ites less Arab or less Muslim than the Palestinians?

I am not a Shi’ite, but an Arab Christian who is critical of Arab hypocrisy. Such hypocrisy is also very strong among Muslims. During my trip to Palestine, I noticed that Nazareth’s Muslims make a point of building a big mosque right next to, and wherever, there is a church, and they try to make sure the minarets are higher than the church steeples.

Arab Muslims lump their fellow Arabs who happen to be Christian in the same category as Western Christians, and think that we are engaged in a mutual conspiracy against them with Western help. This is utterly ridiculous, as we share a common language, culture and history with Arab Muslims, listen to the same kind of music, eat the same kind of foods, relate to family members the same way Muslims do, and follow many other Arab traditions. We were never part of the Crusades, and we sided with the Muslims against what we saw as a foreign, Western, invasion and onslaught against our lands. The indigenous Christians of the Middle East (mainly Orthodox) fiercely resisted the West and the Latin-rite Christianity of Rome, which Western Christians tried to impose on Arab Orthodox Christians and Arab Muslims through their bloody Crusades. Yet ignorant Muslim imams throughout the Arab world warn Muslims to be careful dealing with “the Nasara” (Christians).

Where was the rest of the Arab world when Israel expelled Palestinians from their lands? Where was Saudi Arabia? Where were the Gulf countries? Only three Arab countries fought for Palestine, with Egypt paying the heaviest price (1948, 1956, 1967 and 1973).

When Egypt decided she had already lost enough of her citizens, and had only one shot getting the Sinai back from Zionists, the entire Arab world began hating Egypt and calling them traitors.

I must make it clear that I am no friend of Israel. They have made two of the world’s greatest religions, Christianity and Islam, captives to Zionism. At the same time, there is no effort on the part of Arabs to “clean house”.

There is still a long ways to go, and until Arabs get their “khara” together, Israel will be able to throw its weight around in our neighborhood.

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