Israeli Abusive Administrative
Detentions
By Stephen Lendman
Al-Jazeerah & ccun.org, February 22, 2010
B'Tselem is the Israeli Information Center for Human Rights
in the Occupied Territories. Hamoked is the Center for the Defence of
the Individual, an Israeli human rights organization, aiding
Palestinians whose rights Israel violates. In October 2009, they jointly
published a report titled, "Without Trial: Administrative detention of
Palestinians by Israel and the Internment of Unlawful Combatants Law,"
covering Israel's policy of imprisoning hundreds of uncharged
Palestinians without trial "by order of an administrative official," not
a judge.
By so doing, they're denied due process, may be held
indefinitely, aren't told why they're detained, can't dispute it,
cross-examine witnesses, or present contradictory evidence to refute
them.
Three Israeli laws authorize the practice:
-- the
Order Regarding Administrative Detention (the Administrative Detention
Order), part of military law governing the West Bank;
-- the
Emergency Powers (Detentions) Law for Israel; and
-- the
Internment of Unlawful Combatants Law (the 2002 Unlawful Combatants
Law), like a similar one in America, a dubious Geneva-superceded status
international law expert Francis Boyle calls a:
"quasi-category
universe of legal nihilism where human beings can be disappeared,
detained incommunicado, denied access to attorneys and regular courts,
tried in kangaroo courts, executed, tortured, assassinated and subjected
to numerous other manifestations of State Terrorism."
Administrative Detention in International Law
Prolonged
arbitrary detention is a serious breach of international law. Article 9
of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights states:
1. "Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one
shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention. No one shall be
deprived of his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with
such procedures as are established by law.
2. Anyone who is
arrested shall be informed, at the time of arrest, of the reasons for
his arrest and shall be promptly informed of any charges against him.
4. Anyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention
shall be entitled to take proceedings before a court, in order that that
court may decide without delay on the lawfulness of his detention and
order his release if the detention is not lawful."
Although
infringing the law to a degree is permitted "in time of public emergency
which threatens the life of the nation," Israel uses it consistently,
abusively, and in violation of Fourth Geneva's Article 78 stating:
"If the Occupying Power considers it necessary, for imperative reasons
of security, to take measures concerning protected persons, it may, at
the most, subject them to assigned residence or to internment."
"Decisions regarding such assigned residence or internment shall be made
according to a regular procedure to be prescribed by the Occupying Power
in accordance with the provisions of the present Convention. This
procedure shall include the right of appeal (decided on) with the least
possible delay. (If it's upheld), it shall be subject to periodical
review...."
Administrative detention should never substitute for
customary criminal proceedings and should only be used to prevent
someone from performing a future lawless act, never to transfer
protected persons to the territory of the occupying power.
Administrative Detention of Palestinians
The decision is made by
four Israeli entities:
-- the Israeli Security Agency (ISA);
-- military commander;
-- military's prosecutor's office;
and
-- military judges who adjudicate cases.
Prior to
detention, the ISA or police conduct interrogations, lasting from a few
days to a few weeks. If no indictment is intended, the military
commander decides on whether to detain and for how long. A judge must
then approve it. Each order allows three or six months, but can be
indefinitely renewed so can last years in Israeli Prison Service (IPS)
facilities.
Statistics
As of September 30, 2009, Israel
held 335 Palestinians in administrative detention, including three women
and one minor. One is from Gaza, the others from the West Bank.
According to IPS figures, 22% of them had been held for less than six
months, 37% for six months to one year, 33% for one to two years, and 8%
for up to five years.
For many years, Israel has held thousands
of Palestinians administratively for periods ranging up to years, in
defiance of international laws and norms.
The Administrative
Detention Order and the Supreme Court Case Law
Most detainees
are held pursuant to individual administrative orders under the
Administration Detention Order for the West Bank, under which commanders
may order detentions when they have a "reasonable basis for believing
that the security of the region or public security" is at issue.
Within eight days from arrest, a hearing before a military judge is
required, to approve, cancel, or shorten the ordered time period. Either
side may then appeal to the Military Court of Appeals.
Lower and
appellate hearings are held "in camera" (in chambers) during which the
judge isn't bound by regular rules of evidence. He may "admit evidence
also not in the presence of the detainee or his representative, or
without revealing it to them (if he feels it may) harm the security of
the region or public security." Hearsay evidence is also allowed.
Either side may appeal to the High Court of Justice (HCJ), though rarely
are petitions accepted. Nonetheless, the HCJ calls detention an extreme
measure infringing on detainee rights that only should be used against
someone known to be dangerous, subject to the principle of
proportionality, and never if less harmful alternatives will suffice.
A Semblance of a Judicial System
Two features of
administrative detentions show they're arbitrarily and improperly
imposed. First, the wording used is "laconic, uniform, and contains no
reference to the individual attributes of the detainee." Second, most
orders are for six months, rarely for less than three months, unrelated
to the criteria best suited for individual cases. As such, a huge gap
exists between the established rules and their implementation as Israel
uses detentions indiscriminately, not for exceptional cases.
Yet
military court spokespersons extol what they call "the court's practice
of frequent intervention in administration detention orders (and the
alleged existence of) rigorous judicial review" with statistical support
for what's practiced.
However, the books are cooked. The data is
inaccurate and misleading as judges routinely approve 95% of
orders, rarely limiting the power of military commanders. Further, in
2008, the Military Court of Appeals got 1,880 appeals filed by
detainees, but only 15% were accepted. In cases where prosecutors
appealed, 57% were heard.
It's clear that "in the vast majority
of cases," courts side with the prosecution, including on whether not to
reveal evidence on state security grounds. As a result, detainees can't
defend themselves. ISA agents aren't required to appear in court, and
secret evidence amounts to hearsay. In cases when evidence is revealed,
it's relevance to an alleged danger is unclear because the claim is so
often exaggerated or untrue.
"Contrary to a criminal procedure,
in which the evidence is generally disclosed, the privileged evidence
prevents administrative detainees and their counsel from examining (its)
quality, scope, accuracy, and relevance" to be able to refute it.
"Defense counsel must, therefore, grope in the dark when questioning the
prosecutors" to guess at which approach may uncover the reasons for
detention. Even so, prosecutors often say they can't respond as their
answers are "privileged material," solely for the judge. The HCJ accepts
this as a given, making judicial fairness impossible under a system
designed to deny it.
Even judges don't see all ISA material and
usually don't request it. As such, they ignore caution and prevent
counsel from conducting a proper defense. In addition, detainees often
aren't told what danger they pose or what their detention will prevent.
And judges let prosecutors get away with this, making a mockery of the
rule of law, including for minors.
Yet international law grants
them special protections. Under Article 37 of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, no child shall be deprived of his or her liberty
unlawfully or arbitrarily. Arrest, detention or imprisonment must
conform to the law, only be used as a last resort, and for the shortest
period possible. In addition, all children must be treated humanely,
respecting their needs, access to family members, proper legal
counsel, other assistance, right to challenge the legality of their
detention, and get prompt disposition. Israel ignores international law
in all respects and treats minors the same as adults.
Further,
most administrative detainees are held in Israel, contrary to
international law that prohibits their being held outside the occupied
territory. As a result, families can't visit loved ones because entry
permits are practically impossible to get.
Israel's Unlawful
Combatants Law
It's similar to America's law that international
law expert Francis Boyle called a legally nihilistic perversion of
justice. Yet under Israel's Unlawful Combatants Law (UCL), Palestinians
may be detained indefinitely without trial or hope for judicial
fairness. UCL defines an unlawful combatant as anyone not entitled to
POW status under international law, who either took part in hostilities
against Israel (directly or indirectly) or belongs to a force carrying
them out.
An officer as low-ranking as captain may order someone
interned for 96 hours if he has "a reasonable basis for believing that
the person brought before him is an unlawful combatant." But the burden
of proof falls on victims, not their accusers.
Once an
order is issued, the chief of staff officer, a major general, may issue
a permanent internment order if he has "a reasonable basis for
believing" that the unlawful combatant designation is accurate and the
person threatens state security. No rules of evidence apply so
Palestinians must prove otherwise, and under this law, no time limits do
either, so detention can be forever, without trial and with no justice.
Judicial Review and Presumptions Specified in the Law
Internees must be brought before a District Court judge within 14 days
from the date of the internment order's issuance. If he approves it,
detainment is indefinite, subject to regular six month reviews after
which internees may continue to be held or released at the judge's
discretion. His decision may be appealed to the Supreme Court, but
rarely does it intervene.
UCL is further strengthened by two
presumptions:
-- that releasing unlawful combatants will harm
national security, directly or indirectly, even without evidence; and
-- during or after hostilities, by "determination of the Minister
of Defense....a certain force is carrying out hostilities against
(Israel) or that the hostilities of that force....have come to an end or
have not come to an end, (so claiming it's ongoing) shall serve as
evidence in any legal proceeding, unless the contrary is proved."
UCL's 2008 Revision
In 2008, the Knesset expanded its internment
powers to let the government declare the "existence of wide-scale
hostilities," during which time internees may be held for seven days
prior to issuing a permanent internment order. In addition, lower
ranking brigadier-generals may do it, and judicial review authority
shifts from the District Court to military one established especially
for this purpose.
Use of the Law
It's used primarily
against Gazans but may as well in the West Bank, so far affecting 54
persons:
-- 15 Lebanese nationals since 2002, all of whom have
since been released as part of a prisoner exchange with Hezbollah
following the 2006 Lebanon war; and
-- 39 are Gazans, including
34 interned in 2009 after Operation Cast Lead; nine are still held.
Supreme Court Judgments on the Law
In 2008, the High Court ruled
the law constitutional, and its president, Justice Dorit Beinisch,
stated that:
the "mechanism provided in the law is a mechanism
of administrative detention in every respect."
Thus,
Administration Detention Law rules apply to UCL. Everyone interned must
be for prevention, not punishment for a past act, and those affected
must be:
"members of terrorist organizations in a state of
ongoing hostilities in a territory that is not part of Israel, where a
relatively large number of enemy combatants is likely to fall into the
hands of the military forces during the fighting."
In most
cases, Israel opts for this law because it:
-- grants greater
state powers;
-- provides fewer individual protections;
-- shifts the burden of proof to them;
-- judicial review is
less frequent;
-- no state of emergency need exist; and
-- a sole high-ranking officer, on his discretion alone, may order
anyone interned.
Criticism
UCL's original purpose was to
hold foreigners as "bargaining chips," a provision the Supreme Court
later prohibited. Its purpose was to:
"create a combination of
administrative detention and prisoner of war status, a draconian
incarceration track that grants extremely minimal rights and protections
to the detainee. On the one hand, the state can prosecute such a person
for taking part in hostilities, while, on the other, it can hold him in
prison without trial as if he were a prisoner of war, and release him
only at the end of hostilities, regardless of the personal danger he may
or may not pose if released."
The law was passed even though the
1979 Emergency Powers (Detentions) Law served the same purpose.
Despite subsequent changes since enactment, UCL clearly violates
international law as does America's version. Even Israel's High Court
held that no "unlawful combatant" status exists in international
humanitarian law. These persons are civilians entitled to Fourth Geneva
and other legal protections.
Two of its provisions are
especially egregious - the presumption, without evidence, that a
detainee poses a threat, and the claim that ongoing hostilities release
prosecutors from proving it. Detainees are allowed to prove their
innocence, but doing so is practically impossible because how can they
prove a negative. It's their word against prosecutors, and for non-Jews
the task is daunting, especially since most "evidence" is secret for
reasons of national security.
In addition, UCL is broadly
defined even though international law permits administrative detentions
only in exceptional cases when there's no other way to avert danger.
Israel uses it repressively to detain Palestinians indefinitely, using
secret evidence that may not exist. Yet High Court Justice Elyakim
Rubinstein held that:
"It is not possible to hold a fair
proceeding where there is material that the defense does not have the
opportunity to try to use for its needs."
Final Comments
Israel uses administrative detentions repressively, in violation of
the letter and spirit of international law. In all cases, security
considerations must be balanced against individuals' rights to due
process and judicial fairness.
Detentions based on secret
evidence without trial or meaningful judicial review are "the most
extreme measure that an occupying state may use against residents of the
occupied territory." Used indiscriminately subjects hundreds of
Palestinians to injustice. It's an old story from a state affording it
only to Jews.
Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the
Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be
reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to the Lendman News Hour on
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