REYKJAVIK - U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Friday she was reviewing a State Department decision to withdraw coveted U.S. scholarship grants to Palestinians in Gaza.
At a news conference on a visit to Iceland, Rice suggested she disapproved of the move cancelling the Fulbright scholarships to seven Palestinian students hoping to pursue advanced degrees at American institutions this fall."I can tell you it was a surprise to me," Rice said at a news conference with Iceland's Foreign Minister Ingibjorg Gisladottir. "I am a huge supporter of Fulbrights."
Asked if she would reverse the decision, Rice said: "We'll see what we can do."
The International Herald Tribune newspaper reported earlier that the State Department had withdrawn the Fulbrights from seven Palestinians because Israel had not granted permission for the students to leave Gaza.
The paper, the global edition of the New York Times, said the restrictions were in keeping with Israel's policy of isolating Gaza, which is run by the militant group Hamas .
Fulbright grants are the U.S. flagship programme in international educational exchange and are used to help promote a better understanding of U.S. values abroad.
But Israeli and Palestinian human rights groups say the withdrawal of the Fulbrights is emblematic of a much wider problem in which hundreds of Palestinian students have been prevented from leaving the Gaza strip to study abroad.
Palestinian groups said some 670 Palestinian students, including the seven who qualified for Fulbright grants, missed deadlines to attend programs at universities abroad because of Israel's refusal to let them leave the Hamas-ruled territory.
Rice is expected to return to the Middle East next month as part of Bush administration efforts there to broker a peace deal between the Israelis and Palestinians.
FUTURE OF PALESTINE
She did not directly answer a question about how she would reassure Palestinians who see Washington's Middle East policy as skewed towards Israel that the United States could be an even-handed mediator.
"We really have to be concerned about the future of Palestinians and the future of Palestine," Rice said. If young people there were not given horizons for their expectations, "then I don't know that there would be any future for Palestine, or frankly ...the people of that region who want to have decent lives," she said.
In Jerusalem, Stacy Barrios, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Consulate, said that since Hamas took control of Gaza in June 2007, the Israeli authorities had been extremely reluctant to issue permits for Palestinians to leave Gaza, even on exchange programmes sponsored by the U.S. government.
"While some permits have been approved, many have not. In view of these difficulties, the State Department decided to redirect the Fullbright scholarships from Gazans this year in order to ensure that the exchange opportunities were not lost," she said.
She said the United States had not cancelled the exchange programme for Gaza, and hoped more nominees will be able to secure exit permits in the future. "We urge the Israeli government to allow such individuals to exit and re-enter Gaza."
Hadil Abujouwaik, a 23-year-old computer science student, told Reuters that the State Department this week notified her and six other students in Gaza that their Fulbright grants had been withdrawn.
Abujouwaik completed a first degree in computer science at al-Azhar University in the Gaza Strip and wanted to pursue a post-graduate degree in the same field at a university in the United States.
"I believe the U.S. has the power to help us by using its good relations with Israel. I wish conflicts would not be used to prevent students from pursuing their right for higher education," she told Reuters by phone from Gaza.
additional reporting Nidal al-Mughrabi, Joseph Nasr and Adam Entous
© 2008 Reuters
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15 Comments so far
Show AllArticle quote: "... In view of these difficulties, the State Department decided to redirect the Fullbright scholarships from Gazans this year in order to ensure that the exchange opportunities were not lost,"
Let's guess who might be the recipients of said 'redirection' Can anyone say, Israeli Jews?
Wow, there are some seriously angry people here!
She supports Fulbright scholarships, let's disembowel her and feed her intestines to the hyenas.
WAR CRIMINAL WAR CRIMAL WAR CRIMINAL WAR CRIMINAL WAR CRIMINAL!!!
IN THAT picture she looks like satan's right hand
i can see the horns growing from her forehead, dont you?
her face is the face of death, dont you see it?
look with your third eye, u will sseee whatt i measns.
and as to the article here, put out by the mainstream rueters, (which cannot be trusted)
"said the restrictions were in keeping with Israel's policy of isolating Gaza, which is run by the militant group Hamas ."
what bullshit, they where "ELECTED BY DEMOCRATIC PROCESS"
just label them terrorists and say they are enemys of everything that your family value.
Hamas has more legitimacy than the US government does at this point in time..
The Fulbright Scholarship, haha. I know a person who taught in Kenya with a Fulbright Scholarship. She had to give the CIA information on the novelist/professor (and self-described Communist) Ngugi wa Thiong'o. It's a way of using academics as spies.
Hideous. Dirty. Nasty. Rat toothed. BITCH!
Condi plays her part, in the venerable good cop, bad cop routine. Gnashing teeth and all. Rice, a compassionate conservative, plays the good cop-right!.
camus13 May 30th, 2008 4:42 pm
Just curious, who do you continue to patronize NYT? Reading this (and any corporate media paper) equates supporting.
You war criminal!!!
I wonder if W has a place for her on his S. American ranch where she'll be safe from prosecution as well.
Check the front page story today on this issue in the New york Times.
The idiot reporter (?) said that Gaza is controled by Hama which OVERTHREW the PLO for control.
Idiot they, Hamas, won an election........but what would a New York Times employee know about elections
Blame for this tragic situation in which talented young high achievers in Palestine are being denied US scholarships lies squarely on Israel's government. Yes the Bush administration is an eager enabler, but the core problem is Israel's inhumane, genocidal, anti-democratic treatment of Palestinians. Atrocious, really.
It really shows the true character of the Israeli government: that it stoops to the beneath sh*t level of denying young women and men in Palestine the opportunity of a lifetime--to come to the USA and study on a scholarship--because of greater political conflicts and forces these children have no control or influence over. They are kids for christsakes! The Israel government: holding children hostage, and keeping them in ignorance. How revolting, how vicious.
Interesting how Israel seems to take license to act in ways reminiscent of the Nazis, eh? They did it to us so somehow that makes it OK for us to do it now :( Piss poor logic, IMHO.
Now that we've seen a real example of how Israel strangles Palestinan academic pursuits, who is still against the world boycott of Israeli institutions of learning?
Hi Kindofsleazy Rice! :-)
Enjoying yourself making Americans look bad to the rest of the world? Hmmmm? You enjoying making the USA THE hypocritical nation on Earth?
Nobody needs to be told where your ultimate loyalties lie. You are an opportunistic bitch.
WAR CRIMINAL WAR CRIMINAL WAR CRIMINAL WAR CRIMINAL.
The only words I want to hear from this woman are those she makes from the dock at the ICC. After that I expect to never hear her voice again.
This woman has no skin color. MONSTERS have no skin color. Psychotics have no skin color. Only victims.