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Report denounces Israels human rights abuses
By Jean Shaoul
31 July 2003
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The State of Human Rights in Israel 2003, the newly
released annual report of the Association of Civil Rights in Israel
(ACRI), provides a picture of the systematic abuse of social,
economic and political freedoms.
The report says of the Likud-led government of Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, Although this government cannot be held solely
responsible for the decline, it is clearly guilty of perpetuating
and even exacerbating the situation through acts such as denying
legitimate rights to the Arab minority, devaluing the courts
status as a guardian of democracy, favouring the welfare of the
few over the many, and delivering an almost fatal blow to vital
social services such as health, housing, education and social
welfare.
Government actions have also led to the lack of gainful
employment, and the right of workers to fight for their working
and retirement conditions, the delegitimisation of political rivals
at the cost of fundamental democratic principles of freedom of
speech and equality before the law. And in the territories, a
complete decimation of human rights has taken place, as well as
unprecedented injury to innocent civilians.
Attacks in the Occupied Territories and on
Palestinian Israelis
The author, Naama Yashuvi, received help from a number of Israeli
lawyers in compiling the report. She said that human rights abuses
have become a daily reality in the Occupied Territories, and that
most of these abuses occur not as a result of operational
necessity on the part of the IDF [Israeli Defence Forces], but
from vindictiveness on the part of the soldiers, who receive implicit
approval to denigrate the dignity, life and liberty of innocent
Palestinian civilians.
While the army claims that such actions are contrary to official
policy and any complaints are investigated thoroughly, the military
judges own data shows that most incidents and even deaths
are not investigated. Firstly, incidents resulting in deaths are
not investigated if they occur during combat. Secondly, of the
362 internal investigations between September 2002 and June 2003,
fewer than 13 percent resulted in formal charges and most of these
were for property crimes rather than the crimes of violence and
misuse of firearms that constituted the majority of the complaints.
The ACRI report condemns the IDFs system of roadblocks
and physical blockades. Situated around every single one of the
Palestinian villages, they routinely provide an opportunity for
aggressive behaviour by the IDF, including deliberate and arbitrary
delays without any security justification. A recent incident involved
a soldier engraving a Star of David onto a 19-year-old students
arm with a piece of broken glass.
In June 2002, the IDF imposed a system of roadblocks that have
completely cut off three villages near the city of Nablus in the
West Bank. As a result, 11,000 residents have been penned in.
For 12 months, they have not been able to travel, earn a living,
or receive health care treatment or education. Yet, earlier this
month Israels Supreme Court turned down an application to
dismantle the physical barriers on the grounds that the armys
methods were not unreasonable or disproportionate.
While the security forces claim in court that they allow Palestinians
through the roadblocks to receive emergency medical treatment,
they rarely do so in practice. It is routine to hold up ambulances
for up to an hour at a roadblock, and an ambulance will typically
have to go through several roadblocks to reach a patient. Many
people have lost their lives due to delayed medical treatment.
It is not unknown for women to have to give birth by the roadside
and to lose their babies as a result.
The report states that in the Mount Hebron area soldiers imposed
a reign of intimidation and terror on the local population without
any military justification whatsoever.
Soldiers would prevent farmers from working in their fields,
carry out destructive house-to-house searches, and wake villagers
in the middle of the night with ear-piercing sirens. In a few
instances, soldiers would park their armoured vehicles and rev
up their engines, creating clouds of smoke and choking the residents.
Yet despite filmed evidence, IDF commanders turned a blind eye,
sending a clear signal that deliberate harassment was entirely
acceptable.
As regards Israels curfew policy, the report states that
last year, 45,000 people in the old city of Hebron were kept under
curfew for six months. The total curfew was lifted occasionally
after several weeks, but even then only for a few hours at a time.
The ostensible reason was the frequent clashes between 400 ultra-religious
Zionist settlers and the Palestinian residents, but whilst Palestinians
were confined to their homes for days and weeks on end, the settlers
were free to move around as they wished. Most of the Palestinian
residents and those who worked in the old city lost their jobs
as a result of the curfew, and some of the families faced starvation.
Again the court rejected ACRIs petition to end the curfew.
Between June 2002 and May 2003, the people of Hebron endured
4,786 hours of curfew. Other cities fared little better. Jenin
underwent 2,046 hours, Nablus 4,232 hours, Tulkarem 4,167 and
Ramallah 2,419. It was not unknown for a curfew to be imposed
without any prior warning. Anyone found outside his or her home
during curfew hours was liable to be shot on sight. Between July
and October 2002, at least 12 people lost their lives (usually
children and youths) when soldiers opened fire on them.
The report states that the IDF assassinated 80 Palestinian
militants in the 12 months to June 2003 and that the army admitted
to at least 20 of the assassinations. These targeted killings
of suspected militants, as the IDF calls them, also claimed the
lives of 90 innocent bystandersmen, women and childrenand
injured more than 300 people. Statistics published by the Israel
Air Force in June 2003 show that 25 to 30 percent of operations
using helicopters hit innocent civilians. For example, when the
IDF tried to assassinate the Hamas leader Abed el Aziz Rantissi,
they killed his wife and baby and injured more than 20 Palestinians,
including Rantissi.
In April 2002, during the Israeli invasion of Jenin, the IDF
forced Palestinians at gunpoint to act as human shields for Israeli
soldiers during military operations. The Palestiniansincluding
children and old peoplewere made to stand in front of the
soldiers, knock on doors, remove suspicious objects from the streets,
order people to leave their homes, and stand in front of soldiers
while they were being fired on.
Though the IDF formally prohibits the use of civilians as human
shields after human rights organisations including ACRI, Btselem
and Adalah petitioned the Supreme Court, the practice continues.
ACRI notes an increasing decline in support for democratic
norms over the last few years among wide layers of Israeli society,
including general support for democracy and equality and rights
of the Palestinian minority within Israel. A recent poll showed
that only 77 percent of Jewish Israelis agreed that democracy
was the best form of government. This was the lowest figure of
all the 32 countries except Poland that have carried out similar
polls. Fifty-three percent of Jewish Israelis questioned were
opposed to equal rights for Arabs. Seventy-seven percent believed
that a Jewish majority was needed for all decisions of national
importance. Only 31 percent supported the idea of Arab parties
joining a coalition government and 57 percent supported the emigration
of Arabs from Israel.
In the past year, parliament has considered proposals that
would previously have been seen as beyond the pale:
* In July 2002, the government supported a proposal to authorise
the Israel Lands Authority and the Jewish Agency to distribute
state lands for settlement for Jews only.
* In January 2003, just before the general election, the Central
Election Committee tried to disqualify Dr. Ahmed Tibi, Azmi Bashara
and the Balad party from standing in the elections. While
the Supreme Court overturned the decision, the Election Committee
received a worrying level of public support.
* There is growing support for the revocation of Israeli citizenship
as a form of punishment for all those who are accused of being
traitors or cooperating with terrorist organisations,
or for family members of anyone merely accused of carrying out
a terrorist act. The revocation of citizenship, especially where
this would leave the individual bereft of any citizenship, is
specifically outlawed under international law. Such a proposal
would be applied against the Palestinian population, but not against
Jewish Israelis convicted of selling weapons to terrorist organisations
or providing information to hostile states.
* There are increasing attempts to limit the right to freedom
of speech. The report cites the closing down of Arab newspapers,
the charging of 10 Arab students who took part in a peaceful protest
rally opposing the actions of the IDF in Israel, and the interrogation
and intimidation of the Haaretz journalist who uncovered
an ongoing criminal investigation against Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon for serious criminal offences.
* There is virtually no implementation of government plans
for the development of the Arab sector. Despite the allocations
in October 2000 by the previous Labour government of 4 billion
NIS over four years for the structural improvements in the Arab
sector in Israel, little has been spent.
* In May 2002, the government announced that it would freeze
all new and pending citizenship applications where the foreign
national spouse is of Palestinian origin, affecting in turn the
citizen rights of the couples children to health, education
and social welfare.
Attacks on Jewish Israelis
The report also documents how successive governments have in
the last decade, but particularly in the last two years, attacked
the social, economic and political rights of Jewish Israelis and
implemented policies that have benefited the financial elite at
the expense of the overwhelming majority of the population. As
a result, inequality has soared, making Israel one of the most
unequal countries of the world.
* Unemployment benefits have been cut, eligibility curtailed
and the period of prior employment doubled.
* Pensions have been cut by 4 percent and frozen at January
2001 levels until 2006.
* The guaranteed income was cut by 20-23 percent in 2002, with
substantial cuts in housing aid, cancellation of rights to reduced
municipal taxes, subsidised fares, and exemption from television
licence fees. An additional cut of 29 percent was authorised in
January 2003.
* Housing aid has been scaled back.
* The health service package has disintegrated and charges
increased.
* The Economic Austerity Plan introduced by Finance Minister
Benyamin Netanyahu aims to limit and even prohibit the right to
strike in the public sector and make a strike dependent upon a
secret ballot.
* The Economic Austerity Plan proposes to privatise the penal
system and thus bring about a further decline in Israels
prisons. The prisons are already some of the most crowded in the
world; sanitation is poor and conditions are harsh, with prisoners
being forced to sleep on the floor as a result of the sharp rise
in numbers.
The ACRI report says, the governments actions call
into question the very basis of democratic principles, the social
fabric, and the foundation of human rights in Israel.
Several points should be made. As the reports authors
noted, Israels Declaration of Independence promised that
the State of Israel would foster the development of the country
for the benefit of all its inhabitants. It would be based upon
freedom, justice and peace; it would uphold the full social and
political equality of all its citizens, irrespective of religion,
race or gender; it would guarantee freedom of religion, conscience,
language, education and culture; it would safeguard the holy places
of all religions; and it would be faithful to the principles of
the Charter of the United Nations.
The very opposite is the case today. The report states, As
the Declaration of Independence reaches its 55th year, we still
have no freedom, no justice and no peace, no equality of social
and political rights, no freedom of religion or conscience, and
most certainly no loyalty to the principles laid out in the Charter
of the United Nations.
The tragic irony of the nationalist project as the solution
to the anti-Semitism and oppression that culminated in the Holocaust
is Israels association of the Jewish peoplefor so
long connected with a progressive struggle for tolerance, freedom
and equalitywith the brutal suppression of another people.
It demonstrates that the root causes of anti-Semitism and other
forms of religious, racial and ethnic discrimination are to be
found in economic, social and political not psychological factors.
But there is a further point to be made. Washingtons
support for Sharons determination to hold on to, by what
ever means necessary, the three-year-long illegal occupation of
the West Bank and Gaza signals that no human rights abuses are
too gross for the US and Western leaders to contemplate in the
name of the war on terrorismor, more accurately,
in pursuit of their main client states interests in the
Middle East. It indicates the kinds of methods that the US will
employ to subjugate the entire Middle East in its bid to gain
control of the rich resources of the region. It also signals that
in the not too distant future such methods will be employed against
the working class in the advanced metropolitan countries.
See Also:
US, Israel push Palestinian prime minister
to launch crackdown
[8 July 2003]
Israeli army whitewashes its murder of
US peace activist Rachel Corrie
[5 July 2003]
Chronology of a pogrom:
How Sharon, US prepared assault on Palestinians
[4 April 2002]
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