Common Grounds
No explanation, no appeal: Israel revoking entry authorization of foreign activists
Source: +972 Magazine
https://www.972mag.com/israel-revoking-eta-foreign-activists/
By Liam Syed
Published February 18, 2026
The government is exploiting the visa-free travel system to clamp down on activists supporting vulnerable Palestinian communities in the West Bank.
Israeli soldiers block the path of international activists in Hebron's Old City, occupied West Bank, November 22, 2025. (Mosab Shawer/Activestills)
When Katya* applied for an Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) to return to the occupied West Bank in June 2024, she did not expect Israel to approve it. Twenty years earlier, the long-time Palestinian rights activist had been deported following her arrest by Israeli forces in the Palestinian village of Bil’in, during one of the weekly demonstrations against the construction of the separation wall.
Katya, a Jewish American who described her experience with the Israeli immigration system in 2005 as “pseudo-legal and Kafkaesque” (it included five weeks in jail waiting for an appeal hearing, which was ultimately set for the day after her visa expired), assumed she would never be allowed to return. Yet when she applied for the ETA — now required of all travelers from visa-exempt countries seeking to enter Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories — her application was granted.
On Nov. 11, 2024, Katya entered the country and returned to the West Bank, where she was immediately struck by the vast expansion of Jewish settlements during the intervening two decades. Three days later, during her first full day of protective presence activism (aiming to document and deter settler violence) in the village of Qusra, soldiers on a routine patrol stopped her and photographed her passport. A week after, she and the three activists who were with her that day received identical emails: “Due to a change of circumstances in your case, the ETA-IL approval for application number [redacted] has been revoked.”
The message offered no explanation for the decision, nor any timeline or avenue for appeal. It meant that once Katya exhausted the 90-day limit of her tourist stay, she would be unable to return for at least two years. Others present who had entered Israel before ETAs became mandatory faced no consequences.
For Katya, the contrast between her ETA revocation and her deportation process 20 years earlier was striking. In 2005, there had at least been a theatrical pretence of due process — hearings, judges, and motions — even if the outcome was largely predetermined. The ETA revocation dispensed with even that performance, reducing the whole process to a single email. The bureaucratic machinery that Katya originally encountered had been streamlined into something more efficient and far more difficult to challenge.
The practice of revoking ETAs is the latest addition to a growing arsenal of tools deployed by Israeli authorities to remove international left-wing activists from the occupied West Bank. It comes after National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir launched a self-described “task force for dealing with anarchists” in April 2024 — a police unit dedicated to detaining, deporting, and gathering intelligence on activists doing protective presence in Palestinian communities.
An Israeli soldier stops and questions international activists in the West Bank village of At-Tuwani, October 20, 2024. (Avishay Mohar/ActiveStills)
The state has done little to disguise who this strategy targets. In September 2025, British journalist Owen Jones — a vocal critic of Israeli military conduct — had his ETA revoked just two days after arriving for a visit to Jerusalem and the West Bank with the Palestinian Christian charity Sabeel Kairos.
“On the way back, a border official semi-angrily waved my passport in my face and said, ‘Next time you want to go to Israel, you go to the Israeli Embassy in London first, do you understand?’” Jones told +972.
In January, French historian Vincent Lemire, who has been traveling to Israel for over two decades, received the same vague email alerting him that his ETA had been revoked. A scholar of Israel-Palestine, Lemire was the head of the French Research Center in Jerusalem from 2019 to 2023. The email came after he publicly called on France to sanction Israel over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza (he also consistently called for the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas).
“My positions are not new, but I have never boycotted Israel,” Lemire told AFP. “I have regularly issued invitations to Israeli academics and I have been going to Israel for 25 years, so I am very surprised.” After diplomatic pressure mounted, authorities reversed the decision — an avenue far less accessible to activists without institutional support or media visibility.
Unlike deportations, which can provoke costly diplomatic and media fallout, ETA revocations are fast, quiet, and indeterminate. Through interviews with eight activists whose ETAs were revoked in the past year and a half, +972 traced how Israel is transforming the travel authorization framework into a systematic method of removing foreign activists from the West Bank and isolating Palestinian communities.
‘Palestinization’ of foreign activists
Over the past few years, electronic travel authorization systems have become a common tool for states to pre-screen visa-exempt travellers. The United States, Australia, and the UK have all implemented ETAs (or ESTAs, in U.S. parlance), and they are set to be rolled out across the Schengen Zone later this year.
Israel announced its own ETA system in May 2024 and made it mandatory for visa-free nationals starting in January 2025. Applicants must provide passport information, intended dates of travel, accommodation details, and employment information at least 72 hours before arrival and pay NIS 25 ($8). Applications are officially processed within 24 to 72 hours, but are often approved within minutes.
A solidarity activist makes a peace sign with their hand through a police car window after being detained by Israeli forces in Umm Al-Khair, occupied West Bank, July 29, 2025. (Avishay Mohar/Activestills)
Once granted, an Israeli ETA is valid for two years or until the traveler’s passport expires (whichever comes first), and permits multiple entries for stays of up to 90 days. The Population and Immigration Authority (PIBA) — an arm of the Interior Ministry — administers the system.
Crucially, the ETA does not guarantee entry: It only grants access to the border crossing, where authorities retain the right to deny entry. According to the online portal, ETAs may also be revoked at any time “for immigration or security reasons.”
Publicly, the system is marketed as a streamlined eVisa that “simplifies the application process, making it faster and more convenient” — part of Israel’s effort to “provide a more accessible option for tourists and visitors from various countries.” But activists’ experiences suggest a different motivation. One clear pattern emerges from the cases documented: Those targeted with ETA revocations were working with Palestinians, and mostly in areas under imminent threat of displacement.
Yael Berda, a lawyer and assistant professor of sociology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, describes ETA revocations as the “Palestinization” of Israel’s treatment of international activists. “For Palestinians, when Israel denied their entry, there was never an explanation,” she told +972. “That same permit regime is now being extended to foreigners affiliated with them.”
June, an activist who lived in the South Hebron Hills for three months before having her ETA revoked, echoed that sentiment. “I’m not trying to compare the plight of internationals with what Palestinians are facing,” she told +972. “[But] when you align yourself with Palestinians and actively support them, especially on the ground, you begin to experience some of the same injustices.”
Berda noted that the number of activists denied ETAs at the application stage may be far higher than those whose approvals are later revoked. Previously, activists denied entry at the airport could refuse deportation as an act of protest. Now, she said, “rejection often happens before you even begin your journey.”
Activists seeking to enter Israel from visa-exempt countries are therefore left with little to no recourse — an irony given that ETAs were ostensibly designed to ease travel for nationals whose countries maintain diplomatic agreements with Israel. “People who need visas can go stand at the Israeli Embassy,” Berda explained. “But [those with ETAs] literally have nowhere to go.”
Israeli soldiers detain Palestinian residents on their private land in the village of Qawawis, Masafer Yatta, occupied West Bank, April 19, 2025. (Omri Eran Vardi/Activestills)
According to Michal Pomeranz, an Israeli immigration attorney who has been advising activists affected by ETA revocations, the fact that activists enter Israel on tourist authorizations rather than formal visas makes legal challenges especially difficult. But even if an appeal mechanism were available, she added, it would likely offer little relief.
“In theory, I think courts will say Israel is allowed to refuse people they see as left-wing activists,” she said. “Tourists have very limited standing in Israeli courts.”
Yotam Ben Hillel, a private Israeli immigration lawyer who has been challenging Israel’s refusal to allow foreign doctors into Gaza — many of whom had already worked in the Strip and later spoke publicly about the medical crisis there — sees ETA revocations as part of a broader Israeli strategy of restricting witnesses to its crimes. “It’s the same pattern of not letting in people whose views are not convenient for the regime,” he told +972.
‘I almost thought it was a mistake’
When Nicole Erin Morse — an outspoken anti-Zionist and long-standing member of Jewish Voice for Peace — received notice on Jan. 8, 2025 that their ETA had been revoked, they were in the West Bank doing protective presence. Seeking clarification, they replied to the revocation email and received a confusing response: “Based on the circumstances of your planned arrival to the State of Israel, it has been decided to cancel the ETA-IL authorization that was granted to you.”
“‘The circumstances of my planned arrival’? I had no planned arrival,” Morse told +972. “I was already there, and then I left.”
For Morse, who is Jewish, being barred by Israeli authorities was emblematic. “This reinforced my belief that the State of Israel has nothing to do with Judaism,” they said.
Anuradha Bhagwati, a U.S. military veteran who now dedicates her work to Palestinian advocacy, received her revocation email the same week, likewise citing a “change of circumstances in your case.” “It was polite,” she told +972. “It had no tone — it didn’t accuse me of anything. I almost thought it was a mistake.”
An Israeli soldier takes a photo of protesters during a solidarity visit by left-wing Israeli and international activists in the South Hebron Hills, West Bank, October 2, 2021. (Keren Manor/Activestills.org)
The case of American activist Trudi Frost stands apart: She faced both a formal deportation process and an ETA revocation simultaneously. Frost arrived in Al-Mughayyir, a village northeast of Ramallah, in December 2025 as a first-time activist with the International Solidarity Movement (ISM). Shortly before her arrival, settlers had attacked the village, leaving a 13-year-old resident and his grandmother hospitalized and threatening to return two days later to burn the family’s home.
The day before the attackers’ promised return, with Frost now in the village, Israeli forces imposed a month-long Closed Military Zone (CMZ) order on the area where the family lives, barring entry to everyone except residents (though in practice this often applies only to Palestinians and international activists rather than Israeli settlers). When Frost and another activist refused soldiers’ orders to leave, they were arrested, even though their lawyer maintains that the family’s home was not actually within the boundaries of the CMZ.
Within a week, Frost’s ETA was revoked. She was also deported under Amendment 40 of the Entry to Israel Act (introduced in February 2024 to target, among others, individuals who support boycotts of the state), and banned from entering the country for 10 years.
Because her case involved a deportation order, Frost went through formal proceedings, beginning with a deportation hearing at Ben Gurion Airport and later a tribunal hearing at the prison. There, she was shown the “evidence” compiled against her: a watermelon emoji in her Instagram bio, a photo of her attending a hunger strike rally in Massachusetts, and the presence of pro-Palestinian Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley at the same event.
The tribunal ruled without hearing testimony, basing its decision solely on the police report. Her lawyer appealed the decision, but Frost was deported before further action could be taken.
An arbitrary mechanism of control
While Frost’s deportation proceedings made explicit that her political views were the reason for her removal, activists who receive only ETA revocations are left guessing why they were targeted, and what the terms of their new status might be.
When Chava, a Jewish-American activist doing protective presence with the Center for Jewish Non-Violence, received her revocation on Sep. 9, 2025, she contacted PIBA to find out why. What followed was a deliberately long and confusing process — one so exhausting, she said, that most activists never attempt it.
Palestinian, Israeli, and international activists from CJNV make their way to the Ein Albeida spring, South Hebron Hills, January 3, 2020. (Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)
PIBA directed Chava to contact the Israeli consulate in her region. When she did, consular staff told her they had no information and referred her back to PIBA. She reached out to PIBA again; they redirected her to the consulate. This cycle repeated for months. Chava sent dozens of emails and made follow-up phone calls, each consuming hours of her time, only to be passed back and forth between offices.
Eventually, she went in person to her local consulate. A staff member agreed to call PIBA directly while Chava waited. The call lasted only a few minutes. “I can get no information. You must go to PIBA itself in Jerusalem,” the staffer told her.
“Which is ridiculous,” Chava told +972. “I can’t go to Jerusalem because I can’t enter the country.”
She asked her partner to visit PIBA’s Jerusalem office on her behalf. At first, the official appeared confused about the revocation — until he pulled up her file. “All of a sudden, his demeanor completely changed,” Chava’s partner later recounted. “He was like, ‘Oh, she is absolutely not allowed in the country. She can’t go in.’ No further explanation.”
During Chava’s repeated attempts to seek answers, no formal log or documentation was produced to reflect her efforts to initiate what she hoped would be an appeal. Creating a paper trail would require articulating the legal justification for both revocations and reinstatements — grounds the state either does not have or is unwilling to acknowledge.
Linda, an Italian activist, encountered similar opacity. Four months after spending August 2025 providing protective presence in the Jordan Valley, she received an email informing her that her ETA had been revoked. By then, she was already back home.
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