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Why Are 1,000 Pro-Palestinian Activists Planning to Fly Into Israel on Sunday?

"We're not being conspiratorial here, but we don't want to make the Israelis' job easy."

JERUSALEM (The Blaze/AP) -- Organizers of a planned pro-Palestinian demonstration said Friday they expect about 1,000 activists from Europe and North America to board flights for Israel this weekend, despite Israeli warnings to deport them.

Activists with the "Welcome to Palestine" campaign are set to land in Israel on dozens of flights Sunday. They say they wish to travel to nearby Bethlehem in the West Bank to participate in a week of activities, like the dedication of a school and homestays with Palestinian families.

Mazin Qumsiyeh, a Palestinian campaign organizer, said the activists were coming to exercise their right to visit the Palestinian territories.

"The object is not to fly in to make a protest at the airport. The object is for foreigners to visit us," Qumsiyeh said. "Even prisoners are allowed visits."

Israel's public security minister has called the activists "provocateurs" and said they are bent on disturbing the public order.

Last July, Israel blocked a similar effort. It beefed up security at the airport, questioned dozens of activists upon arrival at the airport and denied entry to 69.

This weekend Israel says it will round up activists who land in the country and deport them.

Israel has also compiled a list of activists it suspects have booked flights to Israel for the campaign, and has warned airlines they would have to fly those passengers back to their cities of origin if they were allowed on flights to Israel. During last year's fly-in, many airlines barred blacklisted activists from flying to Israel.

German airline company Lufthansa said this year it had received a list of names of activists from Israel and would prevent those passengers from its flights to Israel. The "Welcome to Palestine" web site addressed this issue on its web site:

Dozens of passengers who bought a plane ticket to travel to Tel Aviv Sunday on April 15 were notified Thursday by the airline Lufthansa that their reservation was canceled, " by order of Israel."

"Israel has produced a list of names of persons to whom this country denies entry. Yours is on it, which brings us to cancel your ticket and we immediately after will refund to your credit card. " as have said employees of Lufthansa to the passengers.

Having failed to discern in the lists of passengers previously sent to Israel by the airlines, those who intended to participate in the mission Welcome to Palestine and those who were not involved, the Israeli government, greatly accustomed to large "collateral damage" has apparently decided to put them in bulk on its blacklist. At least two people not involved in the mission and had planned to stay in Israel, we have been reported on the evening of Thursday.

Passengers on Lufthansa flights have not committed any offense, and do not accept these mafia-methods, favored by governments complicit in the imprisonment of the Palestinian people, starting with the French government.

Therefore, with the support of many friends, they will appear as scheduled at their airports boarding this weekend, a reminder that the West Bank, nor the rest of Palestine, does not belong to Israel and to demand respect for international law.

Below, watch a press conference from the 2011 event, which provides more information on the initiative:

Nicolas Shahshahani, a campaign organizer in France, said Lufthansa had so far canceled tickets and refunded the cost for 40 people who had been booked on the company's flights originating in France. Two passengers not associated with the pro-Palestinian campaign also were barred from the flight, Shahshahani said.

A national union of aviation workers in France protested the cancellations. Union member Pierre Contesenne said the union had sent a letter to the Air France airline, asking it to allow activists to fly.

No other airlines are known to have announced cancellations yet.

Mick Napier, a British activist coordinator, said the group would sue any airline which denies to board activists bound for Israel.

He said organizers have not compiled a complete list of all the Europeans and North Americans who have booked flights for the "Welcome to Palestine" campaign, to prevent Israel from discovering the list and blocking their entry.

"We're not being conspiratorial here, but we don't want to make the Israelis' job easy," Napier said.

He said organizers have asked participants to be honest with Israeli airport authorities about their purpose of arrival.

Apart from this initiative, throughout the year hundreds of foreigners -- including activists and aid workers -- live, volunteer and work in the West Bank. Israel sometimes denies entry to pro-Palestinian activists it believes could instigate provocations against Israel or pose a risk to the country's security.

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Billy Hallowell

Billy Hallowell

Billy Hallowell is a digital TV host and interviewer for Faithwire and CBN News and the co-host of CBN’s "Quick Start Podcast."