Within three weeks, more than 120 Palestinians were killed and over 4,800 injure
jean | 16.08.2002 15:28
Human Rights Developments
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HEINZREPORT 2002
ISRAEL – PALESTINE
HEINZ – ALL RIGHTS RESERVED BY: HUMAN RIGHT WATCH
Human Rights Developments
Within
three weeks, more than 120 Palestinians were killed and over 4,800 injured in
clashes with Israeli security forces
that
began on September 29. Most of the deaths were the result of excessive, and
often indiscriminate, use of lethal force
by
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers, police, and border police against unarmed
civilian demonstrators, including
children. The casualties were disproportionately on the Palestinian
side, but two Israeli soldiers were beaten to death by
a
Palestinian mob. The large number of deaths and injuries in the clashes and the
resulting deteriorating relationship
between
Israel and the Palestinian Authority and neighboring states greatly
overshadowed and put into question certain
human
rights improvements, notably, an apparent decrease in the use of torture by
Israeli interrogators, a reduction in the
hostages and administrative detainees Israel held, and fewer revocations
of Jerusalem residency permits. In several cases
the
Israeli government also actively sought to thwart court rulings supporting
human rights by supporting initiatives to
legalize torture and hostage-taking, and by delaying the enforcement of
court rulings against discrimination. On July 24,
the
Knesset voted to extend the fifty-two-year-old state of emergency until January
26, 2001, to allow the government
time to
enact similar powers into statute law.
Discrimination in law and practice against ethnic and religious
minorities and other societal groups, especially on issues of
employment,
social benefits, and personal status, remained a major problem. While court
challenges to discrimination
were
sometimes successful, the process often took years, and court rulings
frequently were not applicable to other cases
or were not fully implemented by the
government. For example, on March 8 the High Court of Justice ruled on an
October
1995 petition brought by a Palestinian couple who, though Israeli citizens,
were barred from purchasing a home
in a Jewish neighborhood built on
state-owned lands. More than 90 percent of land in Israel is state land, much
of it
expropriated from Palestinians. The court ruled that the authorities
could not allocate land to citizens solely on the basis
of
their religion, though it noted that discrimination between Jews and non-Jews
might be acceptable under unspecified
"special circumstances." The ruling ordered the government to
take such "special circumstances" into consideration when
determining "with deliberate speed" whether it would allow the
couple to settle in the neighborhood, and stated that its
ruling
in this case would not affect previous discriminatory land allocations.
Women faced discrimination in
employment, access to education and health care, and personal status, including
marriage, divorce, inheritance, and child custody. (See Women's Human
Rights.) Palestinian women and foreign women
workers faced additional
discrimination that made them especially vulnerable to abuses. A number of
well-publicized
cases
of trafficking in women for prostitution, domestic violence, and sexual
harassment and assault helped increase
public
awareness, but women suffering from such violations still had little recourse.
As of this writing, the Defense
Ministry had taken few steps to address an enduring pattern of sexual
harassment of women in the military, despite a
number
of high-profile cases involving ministry officials. The Knesset voted on July 5
to lift the immunity of
Transportation Minister Yitzhak Mordechai, a former defense minister who
had served in the IDF for thirty-three years,
after
he was accused in March of sexually assaulting three women under his
supervision beginning in 1992. By the end of
July
the Civil Service Commission had received fifty-five complaints of sexual
harassment in the Defense Ministry, five
more
than in all of 1999.
On May
22, the High Court of Justice set a six month deadline for the government to
establish procedures for women to
pray
"according to their custom" at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. The
case was brought in 1989 after conservative
Jews
violently attacked Jewish women who were attempting to pray alongside men
according to the customs of Reform
Judaism. Despite a 1994 High Court of Justice ruling upholding the
women's right to worship at the Western Wall, they
were
not permitted to do so. On March 31, a draft law punishing such prayer with up
to seven years of imprisonment
passed its
preliminary Knesset reading, and in early June the government asked to have the
May 22 court judgement
reviewed by an expanded panel of judges, on the grounds that it failed
to adequately address "the affront to the feelings
of those who pray at the wall" that
would ensue if women were allowed to pray with men.
The
rate of revocation of permanent residency permits of Palestinian residents of
East Jerusalem declined following
Minister of Interior Natan Sharansky's October 17, 1999, announcement
that he had ended the so-called "center of life"
policy.
(See Human Rights Watch World Report 2000). After repeated legal challenges led
by the Jerusalem-based
Center
for Defense of the Individual (Hamoked), the High Court of Justice ordered
Sharansky to clarify the terms of the
new
policy, and on March 15 he stated in an affidavit before the High Court of
Justice that Palestinian Jerusalemites living
abroad
would not lose their permanent residency if they visited Jerusalem and
maintained valid Israeli-issued travel
documents. Those who acquired foreign nationality or permanent resident
status elsewhere continued to lose residency
rights in Jerusalem, and Minister
Sharansky did not clarify the status of Palestinian Jerusalemites living in the
West Bank.
According to Hamoked, persons who sought to reinstate their residency
status under the new policy frequently faced
serious
administrative obstacles. Some 11,000 Palestinians were estimated to have lost
their residency rights between
1996
and 1999.
Labor
conditions for foreign and Palestinian workers remained poor. Palestinians
faced widespread discrimination in
employment, while foreign workers were especially vulnerable to
exploitation by employers and labor contractors. On
August
22, Ha'aretz reported that Prime Minister Ehud Barak had ordered an increase in
deportations of undocumented
foreign
workers and set a quota of 50,000 work permits per year. The move was opposed
by workers' groups and even
the
Public Security Ministry, which preferred a policy of targeting labor
importers. The government had temporarily
halted
deportations in December 1999 following allegations of abuses of foreign
workers, including prolonged detention
of
persons awaiting deportation; their detention together with criminal prisoners;
and the detention of victims of crimes
while
awaiting to testify in criminal cases. In May, the Interior Ministry
acknowledged that it had prevented labor
organizations such as Kav La'oved from handing out pamphlets on labor
rights to workers arriving at Ben-Gurion airport.
On
September 29, Israeli security forces used lethal force to disperse thousands
of Palestinians attending Friday prayers
at
al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem after some of those present threw stones at
police and at Jewish worshipers at the
Western
Wall. An unusually large number of Palestinians were present at the mosque to
protest a visit the previous day
by Knesset
Member Ariel Sharon, interpreted by many as an assertion of Israeli sovereignty
over the area. Israeli forces
killed
five Palestinians and wounded over 200. Violent clashes between Israeli
security forces and Palestinians then
spread to other parts of the West Bank,
Gaza, and Israel. Within three weeks, more than 120 Palestinians were killed
and
4,800 injured, many as result of excessive, often indiscriminate, use of lethal
force by Israeli security forces against
unarmed
civilians. In a number of cases IDF soldiers appeared to target Palestinian
medics, at least one of whom was
killed
and twenty-seven were injured by mid-October. At this writing, the IDF had
significantly expanded its use of tanks
and
helicopter gunships armed with both missiles and medium-caliber machine guns in
Palestinian residential areas.
Israel
retained extensive control over, and placed restrictions on, the freedom of
movement of all West Bank and Gaza
Strip
Palestinians. These policies obstructed Palestinian economic activity and
access to health care, schools and
universities, places of worship, and family members in other parts of
the territories or in Israeli prisons. On October 25,
1999,
Israel opened a "safe passage" allowing some increased movement
between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank,
but the
arbitrary nature of the criteria for issuing travel permits and their indiscriminate
imposition on an entire population
assured
that the restrictions remained a form of collective punishment. Following
September 29 Israel increased
restrictions on movement into, out of, and within the West Bank and Gaza
Strip.
Palestinians passing through Israeli checkpoints were frequently
subjected to harassment, physical abuse, and even
torture
by Israeli soldiers and police. For example, in a well-publicized incident on
September 6, three Palestinian
laborers required hospital treatment after being beaten by border police
at a checkpoint. During the attack the police
photographed themselves with their victims, and the unit commander later
told Ha'aretz, "What we did was not special.
Everybody does it." Other incidents resulted in deaths, as on July
9 when soldiers fired on a taxi carrying Atidal
Muammer, killing her and injuring her husband, two children, and other
passersby. Following an investigation, the IDF
saidthe
killing was "a terrible mistake," and stated that its soldiers were
responding to shots from a different vehicle.
However, no such vehicle was recovered and no spent cartridges were
found at the scene of the shooting.
According to government figures, settlement construction in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip increased by
96
percent in the first half of 2000, with 860 of the 1,067 new starts in the
Jerusalem area. At the same time, demolitions
of
Palestinian homes built without permits in the Israeli-occupied territories and
in Israel continued, as did forced
expulsions and expropriation of Palestinian land. In October and
November 1999, Israeli authorities expelled some
seven
hundred Palestinian cave dwellers from the Mount Hebron area of the West Bank,
and destroyed or confiscated
their homes
and their personal property, including livestock. The government alleged that
the area where the cave
dwellers had lived for decades was a "closed military zone."
An investigation by the Israeli human rights group, B'Tselem,
concluded, however, that the area had not
been used for military exercises, and the expulsion was more likely intended
to
placate Jewish settlers whom the government had recently removed from a nearby
illegal settlement outpost. On
March 29 the High Court of Justice
ruled that the cave dwellers could return to the area, pending a final
determination in
the
case.
Close
to one thousand Palestinian prisoners participated in a month-long hunger
strike in May, protesting arbitrary
treatment by prison officials, substandard prison conditions,
prohibitions on family visits, use of solitary confinement, poor
medical
care, and Israel's refusal to release all the categories of prisoners specified
in its agreements with the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO). The strike was called off on May 31 after
prison authorities promised to review
complaints and ease some restrictions on visitors. According to
Ha'aretz, a government report issued in June on
conditions in Shatta prison described living conditions as
"particularly harsh" in the wing where Palestinian prisoners from
the
Israeli-occupied territories were held, and concluded that the exposed tents
used to house prisoners and filthy
bathrooms at the prison were unfit for human use.
Several
deaths in custody were reported. On August 11 Ramez Fayez Mohammed Rashid
Elrizi died in al-Nafha prison.
His
father said that he had been in relatively good health during an August 9
visit. The family of Lafi al-Rajabi told the
nongovernmental Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights
and the Environment (LAW) that he had
contacted them on January 14, shortly before he died in an Israeli
detention center near Nablus, saying his life was in
danger.
His body reportedly was returned to the family bearing cuts, bruises, and with
wire marks on the neck. A third
detainee, Sami As`ad, reportedly hanged himself in Kishon prison on June
19, seven weeks after being arrested.
According to Ha'aretz, a psychiatric evaluation had found him to have
personality disorders, and he had previously
attempted suicide. As of this writing, Human Rights Watch is not aware
of official findings regarding the causes of any of
these
deaths being made public.
On
April 12, the High Court of Justice ruled that Israel could not continue to
administratively detain Lebanese nationals
solely
as "bargaining chips" for the return of its soldiers missing in
action. Five such hostages had been released in
December
1999, and a sixth hostage, reported to be mentally ill, was released on April
5. Thirteen more hostages were
released on April 19, but Israel continued to hold Shaykh `Abd al-Karim
Obeid, kidnapped in July 1989, and Mustafa
al-Dirani, kidnapped in May 1994, despite
repeated court challenges. Both men were held in solitary confinement at an
undisclosed location, and on March 13 a lawyer for al-Dirani filed a
civil case against the Israeli government seeking
NIS6,000,000 (U.S. $1,473,900) in compensation for torture, including
rape, that al-Dirani had allegedly suffered while
in
Israeli custody. On June 11 the Israeli Cabinet approved draft legislation to
legalize hostage-taking which was
specifically intended to facilitate al-Dirani and Obeid's continued
detention, and the bill passed its first Knesset reading on
June
21.
Israel
also continued to detain Palestinians for long periods without charge or trial.
According to the IDF, as of
September 12 Israel held five Palestinians as administrative detainees,
including Khaled Hussein Jaradat, who had been
held
continuously since August 21, 1997.
Following
a September 6, 1999, High Court of Justice ruling that General Security Service
(GSS) officers were not
authorized to use "physical means"-torture-during
interrogations, reports of incidents of torture decreased significantly.
However, according to the nongovernmental
Public Committee against Torture in Israel (PCATI), the GSS continued to
employ
interrogation techniques including beatings, sleep deprivation, prolonged
periods handcuffed to chairs, placing
detainees with
"collaborators" who beat, tortured, and threatened them to obtain
confessions; and long periods of
incommunicado detention. In February, the government made public the
summary of a 1995 state comptroller report
showing that high-ranking GSS officers
had condoned "serious and systematic violations" by GSS interrogators
between
1988
and 1992, and had lied to judges. No actions were taken, however, to prosecute
individuals who had been
responsible for torture, and the Knesset
continued to consider draft legislation to legalize torture in cases where a
suspect
was
believed to have information that could stop an imminent attack.
Palestinian Authority
Palestinian security services
continued to operate with impunity, despite recurring cases of torture,
arbitrary arrests, and
prolonged detention without charge or trial. An overwhelmed judiciary
was further weakened by repeated executive
branch
interference in its work. Critics of these and other Palestinian Authority
(P.A.) abuses were frequently subject to
harassment, arrest, and in some instances, violent attacks. Military and
state security courts issued death sentences after
grossly
unfair trials, which were not subject to appeal.
While
individuals alleged to have affiliations to political organizations critical of
P.A. policy were frequently targeted for
arbitrary arrest, there were also reports of mass arrests, as when some
thirty students were detained after a
demonstration at Birzeit University on February 26. In June, the
non-governmental Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring
Group
(PHRMG) reported that despite seventy-three High Court of Justice orders to
release detainees that had been
issued
since January 1997, only four had been implemented. For example, as of this
writing Wa`il`Ali Faraj, arrested on
April
25, 1996, remained in detention despite a February 20, 1999, court order for
his release.
The
security forces' impunity extended to torture and ill-treatment of both
political and criminal detainees. According to
LAW,
when questioned on August 7 about specific cases of torture, Police Commander
Major Kamal al-Shaykh
asserted that "the thief who does not confess must be beaten as a
last resort to force him to confess." Such attitudes may
have
contributed to the June 6 death in custody of thirty-five-year-old Khalid
Mohammed Yunis Bahar. According to the
Palestinian human rights group Law in the Service of Man (al-Haq), P.A.
police arrested Bahar on May 25, apparently
without
a warrant, and his family was prevented from visiting him. Earlier, on December
6, 1999, Mahmud Mohammed
Khalil
Hassan al-Bajjali, age thirty-three, died in Ramallah prison. Both men were
reported to have been in good health.
As of
this writing the P.A. had not released autopsy reports in these and twenty-one
cases of deaths in custody that
occurred in previous years.
During
clashes between Palestinians and the IDF that began on September 29 (see
above), Palestinian security forces
failed
to act consistently and effectively to prevent armed civilians from opening
fire on IDF soldiers or positions from
places
where civilians were present. This failure endangered the Palestinian civilian
population when the IDF responded,
often
excessively and indiscriminately.
The
judiciary suffered from a severe lack of resources and executive branch
interference, and trials fell far short of
international fair trial standards. P.A. President Yasser Arafat refused
to ratify the Judicial Authority Law, passed by
parliament on November 25, 1998, and instead issued ad hoc decrees,
including a June 1 decree creating a Supreme
Judicial Council with poorly defined powers, and a November 1, 1999
decree creating the post of "attorney general for
state
security courts." The new post was filled by Khaled al-Qidra, the disgraced
former attorney general who had been
removed
from his post in 1997 following complaints of corruption and protests by human
rights organizations.
Fair
trial violations were particularly egregious in state security courts, which,
along with "regular" military courts, had the
power
to try civilians and were responsible for the majority of death sentences
passed. Trials in these courts were not
subject
to appeal, and sentences were sometimes issued only hours after arrest, as in
the case of Raji Saqir. A state
security court sentenced Saqir to death on July 3, having convened on
the night of July 2, the day after the crime was
committed. Security court jurisdiction was expanded in June to include
drug trafficking cases, including those punishable
by
death.
The
P.A. continued its efforts to control and restrict freedom of expression.
Broadcast media were frequently subject to
closure, and journalists and commentators to
arrest, in retaliation for reporting criticism of P.A. policies. Five radio and
television stations were ordered suspended between May 5 and June 2, and
on June 2 Samir Qumsiah, chair of the
Council of Private Radio and
Television Stations, was arrested after calling on stations to halt broadcasts
for half an hour
to
protest the closures. Security forces also arrested eight prominent
personalities who signed a November 27, 1999,
petition criticizing P.A. "tyranny and corruption." Six were
released on JD50,000 (U.S. $70,000) bail on December 19,
but
Ahmad Dudin and `Abd al-Sattar Qassem were held until January 6. Qassem was
rearrested on February 18 and
detained until July 28, despite a July 11 High Court of Justice order
for his release.
Academics risked punishment when their published views challenged social
conventions. On November 24, 1999 the
Islamic
University in Gaza suspended Dr. Jawad al-Dalou and two students for publishing
a student newspaper article
that
noted that many beggars came from the Nezla district in Gaza. A statement
issued by the university said the
suspensions
were "in respect of the wishes of the dignified local personalities of the
district of Nezla in the Jabalia camp."
On
February 29 Chief of Police Ghazi al-Jabali issued new regulations limiting
freedom of assembly, in contravention of
existing law. The regulations prohibited organizing processions,
demonstrations, or public meetings without prior
approval from the district police commander, on penalty of up to two
months of imprisonment or an up to JD50 (U.S.
$70)
fine. The High Court of Justice suspended their implementation on April 29, but
as of September had not acted to
revoke
these or other regulations limiting freedom of assembly issued by President
Arafat in his capacity as minister of
interior on April 30.
jean
e-mail:
cee@post.com
Homepage:
http://mx.geocities.com/heinzreport