I was not asked for a CD, but when I showed the 3-4 pages printed on
purpose to confirm my attendance, I was told I should have received
another document for the security. I just said "no, I did not".
When asked about my Egypt stamp, my answer was straight "Wikipedia,
annual conference each time in a different city (I listed them), this
year in Haifa. Great time".
When asked why attending this conference was of any interest to me, I
answered sweetly that I was a speaker. I felt that they liked this answer ;)
I entered the airport at the same time than Teemu. We went through the
same procedure, in particular a different security line for the
hand-luggage (with no queue... contrariwise to others). They had a
special system for electronic gear. It felt as if their checking gate
was more modern and giving finer results than the regular one. 3 years
ago, I had this security person telling me that my laptop was a fake
because I could not start Internet Explorer. This year, the lady asked
me whether my (11 inch book air) laptop was actually a laptop or a ipad.
It was put in a special padded box for scanning.
In an hour, we were all set.
However, other French people did not have the same luck. After 3 hours
of control, items were confiscated, some with a ticket receipt, some
without anything. Staff in Paris airport said it was unlikely it would
be recovered. Another wikipedian mentionned "behind the curtains" search.
No bad ill toward the really wonderful organizers of Wikimania (you
really rocked !), but to me, this behavior at borders security goes
beyond what I consider acceptable. Even if it has no obvious outcome, I
would really like that those who had bad experience report it either to
their embassy or to Israel officials. Somehow, I think that a 3 hours
check, with body search and confiscation of items, for citizens who show
really no sign of being dangerous for the State of Israel and which are
leaving the country (not entering it) and doing so in non-Israelian
flight companies, is simply not respectful of human rights. And as any
situation of abuse, just trying to go under the radar and regretting
that it went so bad, is passively accepting what is not okay is giving
the wrong message and calling for further abuse.
Florence
On 8/10/11 9:47 AM, Liam Wyatt wrote:
I would suggest that it's not about "the
CD" itself, but anything to prove your attendance at the conference you said you went
to. So, keep your attendee badge easily available. The conference bag, the printed
schedule or other things that you picked up at Wikimania would be good. Just a
suggestion,
-Liam
On 10/08/2011, at 5:37, WereSpielChequers<werespielchequers(a)gmail.com> wrote:
I'm in Jerusalem for a few more days, can
anyone suggest how I can
obtain one of these Wikimania CDs or what it could contain?
WereSpielChequers
On 9 August 2011 20:22, Nathan<nawrich(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 3:13 PM, Harel
Cain<harel.cain(a)gmail.com> wrote:
All credit goes to Arthur Schnitzler and his
beautiful novella
"Traumnovelle", on which Kubrick's movie is based.
It never ceases to amaze me what a huge diffrence between the treatment that
visitors and locals get at TLV. Even though I fly out quite often, for many
years now my longest questioning was maybe 2 minutes, and my luggage was not
manually searched at all.
Harel
It doesn't seem amazing at all to me that El Al invests less suspicion
in Jewish citizens of Israel, but that's just me :P
_______________________________________________
Wikimania-l mailing list
Wikimania-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
_______________________________________________
Wikimania-l mailing list
Wikimania-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
_______________________________________________
Wikimania-l mailing list
Wikimania-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l