50 Years of the Israeli Brutal Military
Occupation, Persecution, and Subjugation of the Palestinian People
By Human Rights
Watch
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June
13, 2017
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Israeli white phosphorus attacks on Gaza 2014 |
Palestinian children killed by Israeli attacks on Gaza, in 2014 |
Israel: 50 Years of Occupation Abuses
Fifty years after Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip, it
controls these areas through repression, institutionalized
discrimination, and systematic abuses of the Palestinian population’s
rights, Human Rights Watch said today.
At least five categories
of major violations of international human rights law and humanitarian
law characterize the occupation: unlawful killings; forced displacement;
abusive detention; the closure of the Gaza Strip and other unjustified
restrictions on movement; and the development of settlements, along with
the accompanying discriminatory policies that disadvantage Palestinians.
Many of Israel’s abusive practices were carried out in the name of
security. Palestinian armed groups have carried out scores of lethal
attacks on civilians and launched thousands of rocket attacks on Israeli
civilian areas, also in violation of international humanitarian law.
“Whether it’s a child imprisoned by a military court or shot
unjustifiably, or a house demolished for lack of an elusive permit, or
checkpoints where only settlers are allowed to pass, few Palestinians
have escaped serious rights abuses during this 50-year occupation,” said
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Israel
today maintains an entrenched system of institutionalized discrimination
against Palestinians in the occupied territory – repression that extends
far beyond any security rationale.”
As the occupation enters its
second half-century, the focus should be on increasing the protection of
the rights of the population of the occupied territory, Human Rights
Watch said.
Unlawful Killings & War Crimes
Israeli troops killed well over 2,000 Palestinian civilians in the
last three Gaza conflicts (2008-09, 2012, 2014) alone. Many of these
attacks amount to violations of international humanitarian law due to a
failure to take all feasible precautions to spare civilians. Some amount
to war crimes, including the targeting of apparent civilian structures.
In the West Bank, Israeli security forces have routinely used
excessive force in policing situations, killing or grievously wounding
thousands of demonstrators, rock-throwers, suspected assailants, and
others with live ammunition when lesser means could have averted a
threat or maintained order.
Armed Palestinian groups also
committed war crimes during these conflicts and at other times,
including rocket attacks targeting Israeli population centers. Between
the start of the first Intifada in December 1987 and the end of February
2017, attacks by Palestinians killed at least 1,079 Israeli civilians,
according to the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem.
Israeli official investigations into alleged security force abuses
during the Gaza conflicts and in policing situations failed to hold the
abusers accountable, with rare exceptions. Palestinian authorities have
also failed to investigate violations and hold those responsible to
account.
Illegal Settlements
Israeli authorities have since 1967 facilitated the transfer of its
civilians to the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in
violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention. In 1967, Israel established
two settlements in the West Bank: Kfar Etzion and East Talpiot; by 2017,
Israel had established 237 settlements there, housing approximately
580,000 settlers. Israel applies Israeli civil law to settlers,
affording them legal protections, rights, and benefits that are not
extended to Palestinians living in the same territory who are subjected
to Israeli military law. Israel provides settlers with infrastructure,
services, and subsidies that it denies to Palestinians, creating and
sustaining a separate and unequal system of law, rules, and services.
Forced Displacement
Israeli authorities have expropriated thousands of acres of
Palestinian land for settlements and their supporting infrastructure.
Discriminatory burdens, including making it nearly impossible for
Palestinians to obtain building permits in East Jerusalem and in the 60
percent of the West Bank under exclusive Israeli control (Area C), have
effectively forced Palestinians to leave their homes or to build at the
risk of seeing their “unauthorized” structures bulldozed. For decades,
Israeli authorities have demolished homes on the grounds that they
lacked permits, even though the law of occupation prohibits destruction
of property except for military necessity, or punitively as collective
punishment against families of Palestinians suspected of attacking
Israelis.
Israel has also arbitrarily excluded hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians from its population registry, restricting
their ability to live in and travel from the West Bank and Gaza. Israeli
authorities have justified these actions by citing general security
concerns, but they have not conducted individual screenings or claimed
that those excluded posed a threat themselves. Israel also revoked the
residency of over 130,000 Palestinians in the West Bank and 14,565 in
East Jerusalem since 1967, largely on the basis that they had been away
too long.
Gaza Closure, Unjustified Movement Restrictions in
West Bank
For the last 25 years, Israel has tightened restrictions on
the movement of people and goods to and from the Gaza Strip in ways that
far exceed any conceivable requirement of Israeli security. These
restrictions affect nearly every aspect of everyday life, separating
families, restricting access to medical care and educational and
economic opportunities, and perpetuating unemployment and poverty. As of
last year, Gaza’s GDP was 23 percent lower than in 1994. Seventy percent
of Gaza’s 1.9 million people rely on humanitarian assistance.
Israel also has imposed onerous restrictions on freedom of movement in
the West Bank, enforced at checkpoints within the West Bank and at its
borders with Israel. Israel’s separation barrier, ostensibly solely
built for security, in fact slices through the West Bank significantly
more than it runs along the Green Line separating the West Bank from
Israel, contrary to international humanitarian law, as confirmed by the
International Court of Justice in July 2004.
Abusive
Detention
Israeli authorities have incarcerated hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians since 1967, the majority after trials in military courts,
which have a near-100 percent conviction rate. In addition, on average,
hundreds every year have been placed in administrative detention based
on secret evidence without charge or trial. Some were detained or
imprisoned for engaging in nonviolent activism. Israel also jails West
Bank and Gaza Palestinian detainees inside Israel, creating onerous
restrictions on family visits and violating international law requiring
that they be held within the occupied territory. Many detainees,
including children, face harsh conditions and mistreatment.
The
Palestinian Authority, since its creation in 1994, and Hamas, since
becoming the de facto authority in Gaza in 2007, have arbitrarily
detained dissidents, tortured and mistreated detainees, and, according
to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, executed 41 people pursuant
to death sentences after flawed trials.
The law of occupation,
designed to regulate the exceptional and temporary situation in which a
foreign military power displaces the lawful sovereign and rules by
force, grants an occupier broad but limited powers to restrict
individuals and their rights to meet security needs.
However, in
a prolonged occupation in which occupiers have the opportunity to
develop more narrowly tailored responses to security threats, exemptions
to rights protections should be reduced and the balance shifted toward
respecting, protecting, and fulfilling all fundamental rights of the
population. In addition, the occupier’s obligation to restore normal
civilian life for the local population increases with the passage of
time, as do its obligations to progressively realize the social,
economic, and cultural rights of residents of the occupied territory.
After decades of failure to rein in abuses associated with the
occupation, the international community should take more active measures
to hold Israeli and Palestinian authorities to their obligations under
international human rights and humanitarian law. Other countries and
businesses should cease activities carried out inside settlements and
change policies that support settlement-related activities and
infrastructure, in keeping with their respective human rights
responsibilities.
Governments should use their leverage to press
Israel to end the generalized travel ban for Palestinians from Gaza and
permit the free movement of people and goods to and from Gaza, subject
to individualized security screenings and physical inspection. The
International Criminal Court should open a formal investigation into
serious international crimes committed in Israel and Palestine both by
Israelis and Palestinians.
“Fifty years of occupation and
decades of a fruitless peace process should put firmly to rest the
notion that downplaying human rights will ease the path to a negotiated
solution to the conflict,” Whitson said. “Concerted action for rights
and accountability is urgently needed, including through the
International Criminal Court.”
On the occasion of the
occupation’s 50th anniversary, Human Rights Watch has made available
online publications dating back to the 1980s and early 1990s.
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Israel/Palestine, please visit:
https://www.hrw.org/middle-east/n-africa/israel/palestine
For more information, please contact:
In New York, Omar Shakir (English, Arabic): +1-646-725-8650 (mobile);
or shakiro@hrw.org. Twitter: @omarsshakir
In Johannesburg, Sari Bashi
(English, Hebrew): +972-3-372-7609 (mobile); or +27-76-0287533; or
bashis@hrw.org. Twitter: @saribashi
In New York, Sarah Leah Whitson
(English): +1-718-213-7342 (mobile); or whitsos@hrw.org. Twitter:
@sarahleah1
In Washington, DC, Ahmed Benchemsi (English, French,
Arabic): +1-929-343-7973 (mobile); or benchea@hrw.org. Twitter: @AhmedBenchemsi
In Washington, DC, Eric Goldstein (English, French): +1-917-519-4736
(mobile); or goldstr@hrw.org. Twitter: @goldsteinricky
https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/06/04/israel-50-years-occupation-abuses
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