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Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Palestinian student denied Swedish citizenship vows to keep ‘fighting for justice’

Isra Barham’s Swedish citizenship application was rejected due to her pro-Palestine activism at Chalmers University

A Palestinian student in Sweden is being denied citizenship due to her activism on campus, the latest case of pro-Palestine advocates being targeted in Western and European nations.

Soon after Israel launched its war on Gaza, Isra Barham and a group of students at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg started a campaign to express solidarity with Palestine.

Read more: Turkish president, Saudi crown prince discuss Israel’s ongoing ‘genocide’ in Palestine

They set up social media accounts under the name Chalmers Social Justice and started off with walkouts, candlelit vigils and discussion groups, all aimed at raising awareness about what Palestinians were facing at the hands of the Israeli military.

The campaign gained momentum and led to nearly 150 people signing a petition demanding that the university sever its ties with Israeli companies and institutions, and do more to support its Palestinian students, Barham told Anadolu.

Among the Israeli firms linked to the university is Elbit Systems, a major defense contractor, and the students successfully managed to cancel a speaking engagement of an Elbit representative last year.

The Chalmers University management responded to the petition by imposing a ban on political activities at the university.

“They actually banned all political manifestation at the university,” said Barham, 33, an architecture postgraduate student.

“This was the first and only university in Sweden that banned political manifestation, although it’s actually in a democratic country where you are allowed to actually protest.”

‘A system where anyone can be targeted’

The ban was short-lived as protests by students, faculty and staff forced the management to backtrack, but it was an indicator of what lay in store for Barham.

The university reported Barham and her fellow activists to the police for a demonstration they organized on campus on Dec. 5.

“They couldn’t find anything to report, but still they wanted to report something, and the only name they had was my name,” said Barham, a Palestinian and Romanian citizen who has lived and worked in Sweden since 2010.

Videos of the event in question show it was completely peaceful, with students, including Barham, kicking it off in the cafeteria with a rendition of Leve Palestina, the 1979 song by Swedish-Palestinian singer George Totari that has become a global antiwar anthem.

That was followed by a discussion at another campus location, during which they distributed coffee and cookies to the participants. Despite the peaceful nature of the event, the management reported them to the police for using a university space for such activities.

Four months later, the Swedish Migration Agency announced that Barham’s citizenship application, pending for two years, had been rejected.

The reason cited in the official correspondence was that Barham did not fulfill the requirement for an “honest way of life,” a provision in Sweden’s tightened immigration laws, because she is “suspected of a violation of the public order law that occurred on December 5, 2023.”

“The police report was used to deny my citizenship despite the fact that the case was closed and there was no crime,” said Barham.

“The university knows about that. I actually talked to them as soon as I knew that this was the reason that they are denying me Swedish citizenship, and they said that they have nothing to do with it, and that I should be solving this on my own.”

Barham’s appeal against the rejection was also declined, leaving her facing an uncertain future.

She criticized the “problematic” recent changes to Swedish law that allow police reports to affect a person’s immigration status.

“It creates a system where anyone can be targeted, impacting their ability to stay in the country,” she said.

Determined ‘to do it even more than before’

At Chalmers University, there have been “consequences” for any form of activism or pro-Palestine advocacy, according to Braham.

“Even if it’s just showing a movie, or just giving out coffee to students and trying to engage in a conversation about Palestine and Israel. There are always consequences,” she said.

The main issue, she argued, is that their activism is misconstrued as something political.

“We have never taken anything from a political perspective. It’s always from a humanitarian perspective … It’s not political at all,” she asserted.

Braham also called out the university administration for its double standards regarding Israel’s war on Gaza and the Ukraine conflict.

“My university was the first to speak about Ukraine and do something about it and show their support,” she said, lamenting the silence and repression on the Gaza crisis.

Anadolu reached out to Chalmers University for a comment but did not receive a response.

Despite all her personal difficulties, Braham remains committed to her advocacy for the Palestinian cause and aims to complete her thesis on Palestine.

“I am actually going to do it even more than before. Together with my colleagues, we are fighting for our freedom and our rights to democracy that this country is pretending to give us,” she said.

“I am focused on finishing my degree and continuing my activism. I believe in the importance of raising awareness and fighting for justice.”