The Palestinian identity card (Arabic: ) is an identity document issued by the Palestinian Authority to Palestinian citizens of Palestine. It is defined in Article (2) of the Palestinian Civil Status Law of 1999 as a "legal document for identifying its holder," issued by the Civil Status Directorate of the Palestinian Ministry of Interior. Under Palestinian law, individuals registered in the population registry are required to obtain an identity card upon reaching the age of 16.
Unlike traditional citizenships, obtaining a Palestinian identity card (hawwiya) depends on being registered in the Palestinian population registry rather than simply on descent. In practice, a person must be physically present in the State of Palestine before passing the age of 16 and be added to a parentâÂÂs identity card before receiving their own. Because of these requirements, many Palestinians in the diaspora who were never registered or were unable to visit Palestine and therefore cannot receive a Palestinian passport.
The modern Palestinian identity card system developed after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war and is distinct from earlier identification documents issued during the period of Mandatory Palestine (1920âÂÂ1948). During the Mandate period, the British administration issued various forms of identity papers and travel documents to residents of Palestine.
Following the end of the British Mandate and the outbreak of the 1948 ArabâÂÂIsraeli War after the establishment of Israel in 1948, Jordanian forces occupied the area during the war, In 1950 Jordan annexed the territory that became known as the West Bank. During this period, West Bank residents were incorporated into JordanâÂÂs administrative and civil documentation systems, including identification documents issued by the Jordanian government. This arrangement continued until 1967.
During the same period, the Gaza Strip came under the administration of Egypt following the 1948 war. In 1958, Egypt entered into a political union with Syria known as the United Arab Republic. While Gaza remained under Egyptian administration during this period, it was formally administered in connection with Egypt as part of the United Arab Republic until the union with Syria ended in 1961. Egypt continued to administer Gaza until 1967.
Following the 1967 war, Israel captured the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan and the Gaza Strip from Egypt and created a population registry for residents of the Palestinian territories. A population census was then conducted, and individual present then were registered in the Israeli-controlled population registry and assigned unique identification numbers. These numbers later formed the basis of the modern Palestinian identification system.
Until the Oslo Accords, Palestinian identity cards were issued by the Israeli Military Government following the 1967 war, and later by the Israeli Civil Administration. The plastic cover of the ID carried the emblem of the Israeli army. Card colors differed by region:
Then, after the establishment of the Palestinian Authority, as a result of the Oslo Accords, the responsibility for issuing ID cards to residents of the West Bank and Gaza Strip was consequently transferred to the Palestinian Ministry of Interior, subject to Israeli approval. Under the agreements, Israel transferred the authority over the Palestinian population registry and address data to the Palestinian side.
In 1996, Israel reinstated the requirement of prior approval for changing a resident's registered address from Gaza to the West Bank.
In 2000, Israel announced it would not recognize any registry changes made without its approval. Israel also determines the national ID numbers of Palestinians. Palestinians holding Gaza IDs but residing in the West Bank are considered by Israel to be âÂÂillegally present.âÂÂ
In the early 2000s, the Palestinian Authority changed the color of the Palestinian identity card cover to green for Palestinians of both the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The 1999 Civil Status Law sets the legal basis for the Palestinian ID card. Key provisions include:
Under Law No. 3 of 2008, which amended the 1999 Civil Status Law, two additional provisions regarding identity cards were introduced:
Palestinian identity cards are issued in a laminated booklet format, kept inside a plastic cover alongside a folded supplement sheet ("ID annex").
The following information appears on the card, written in both Arabic and Hebrew.
The supplementary ID annex (an additional piece of paper), stored in the second pocket of the plastic cover, contains: