Kuwait Airways Bars Wife From Accompanying Husband on Flight Because She’s Israeli

Iris Eliazarov, an Israeli citizen who lives in NYC says this discrimination is reminiscent of the old European ‘selection process.’
• Airline’s attorney claims policy is against citizenship, rather than religion.

By Ynet

 

Iris Eliazarov, an Israeli who lives in Queens, has filed a lawsuit against Kuwait Airways after she was barred from boarding its flight out of Kennedy Airport because she’s an Israeli citizen, the New York Daily News reported on Friday.

Iris Eliazarov and husband David Nektalov

Eliazarov and her husband David Nektalov bought tickets from a travel agent to fly from New York to London with the flagship Kuwaiti airline. While Nektalov was allowed on the flight with his US passport, Eliazarov was stopped when she presented her Israeli passport and was forced to buy a ticket on another airline.

The company cited a Kuwaiti law prohibiting Israeli citizens from flying on Kuwait Airways.

Attorney John Maggio, who represents the airline, said the discrimination suit has no merit because the airline’s policy is based on citizenship rather than religion, claiming that a Muslim with an Israeli passport would also not be allowed on the plane.

Meanwhile the couple’s lawyer, Attorney Paul Kerson, argued the airline’s policy was in violation with both state and federal civil rights laws.

Federal Judge Roslynn Mauskopf ordered top federal and state law enforcement officials – Brooklyn US Attorney Loretta Lynch and State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman – to weigh in on the suit.

Eliazarov, who was born in Israel and moved to the US at the age 11 on a green card, said she drew her inspiration from Rosa Parks.

“I take strength from the experience of Rosa Parks,” Eliazarov was quoted by the Daily News as saying. “She became famous for her principled stand. This experience has awakened the nightmare of the experience of the Jewish people in Europe in the last century. That was a time of the wrongful splitting of families, often at transportation facilities.

Her husband Nektalov told the Daily News that he “didn’t think a discrimination like this could exist in America, in JFK (Airport), in New York City. If they want to operate here, they have to obey our laws. Sixty years ago blacks weren’t allowed to ride buses. This is not about money. You have to make a stand.”

 

View original Ynet publication at: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4624171,00.html