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Publish date: Saturday 10 September 2022
view count : 128
create date : Saturday, September 10, 2022 | 4:32 PM
publish date : Saturday, September 10, 2022 | 4:28 PM
update date : Saturday, September 10, 2022 | 4:33 PM

How Israel's anti-terror law is crushing Palestinian civil society

  • How Israel's anti-terror law is crushing Palestinian civil society

Last month, Israeli forces raided and shut down the offices of seven Palestinian civil society organisations in the West Bank.
 

In June 2021, the Israeli army raided and shut down the Ramallah-based Palestinian Health Work Committees (HWC), a year and a half after an Israeli military order deemed the healthcare organisation "unlawful" in January 2020.

The attack on Palestinian NGOs was further escalated by Defence Minister Benny Gantz's proclamation of six other Palestinian NGOs as "illegal terrorist" organisations, according to Israeli law, in October 2021.

The terrorist designation of the six groups was based on the 2016 Counter-Terrorism Law and 1945 Emergency Regulations, also known as the "Anti-Terror Law", and what Israeli authorities called "secret evidence".

The offices were closed in August after the military commander in the occupied West Bank upheld the decision. The United Nations criticised this move as "totally arbitrary".

War on civil society
 

The closures were followed by threats of restrictions, prosecutions, and other rights violations that may include a travel ban for staff and activists associated with these institutions, the confiscation of additional property, and even arrest.

In July 2021, Shatha Odeh, the director of the HWC, was arrested and sentenced to 16 months in prison and ordered to pay a fine. Meanwhile, Israeli authorities are still renewing the administrative detention order against Salah Hammouri, a lawyer at Addameer, one of the criminalised human rights organisations.

What distinguishes these groups is that they are human rights and civil society organisations that provide services, support, and counsel to the Palestinians living under occupation.

They work in accordance with Palestinian law and adopt international charters and agreements that are in line with the conditions of a people under occupation, particularly the Fourth and Third Geneva Conventions.

Implementing the court's ruling, at dawn on 18 August, the Israeli army stormed the headquarters of the seven NGOs, confiscated their files, computers and office equipment, and announced their complete closure by placing military orders on their doors and fixed iron plates at their entrances.

These raids are a flagrant violation of the proper legal process that is required to take place in every "fair" trial, as institutions have been declared "terrorist" without revealing evidence before them to which they could plead or respond.

Even if the institutions refrain from petitioning Israel as the occupying country, its army, its judiciary, and its courts, and consider them to have no legal jurisdiction in the Palestinian Area A (according to the 1993 Oslo Accords), this does not preclude their right to review the evidence.

Al-haq office closed

Activists hang a banner outside the Palestinian Al-Haq Foundation in the West Bank city of Ramallah after Israel raided and closed an entrance to their offices, on 18 August 2022 (AFP)

However, the refusal of the Israeli authorities to disclose the alleged evidence, claiming that the disclosure “harms the security of the state” is an additional violation of law and the proper legal process, which prompted these institutions’ defence team to file procedural objections on 3 February to the military commander of the Occupied Palestinian Territories on behalf of five of the organisations. However, the military legal advisor issued a decision rejecting these objections.

This blatant step was condemned and rejected at the international, regional, and local Palestinian and Israeli official and unofficial levels.

On 22 August, the European Union ambassadors, including the ambassadors of Germany, France, Italy, Spain and the EU ambassador to Israel, after their meeting with the representative of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, were clear about their continued support and financing of these organisations despite Israel’s declaration that they are “terrorist”.  

Criticising the raid of their offices, the ambassadors added that they do not view them as terrorist groups and reject such designations.

International condemnation
 

A statement spearheaded by the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, and signed by more than 200 organisations around the world, called on the international community to take a stand against these measures, expressed solidarity with the seven NGOs, and demanded pressure on Israel to repeal the banning orders and the Anti-Terror Law of 2016.

In addition, 53 Israeli organisations declared that "human rights are not terrorism" and condemned the banning orders.

The statement argued that "these declarations are baseless. Indeed, the US Administration, the European Union and other allies of Israel found Israel’s allegations unconvincing. After thoroughly examining the material Israel provided them, all of the European countries that are donors to these organizations decided to continue their support."

Following the "terrorist" designation last year, Palestinian civil society organisations active in Israel released a statement on 25 October condemning the Israeli government's decision: "[We] consider this a blatant undermining of civil and human rights work, and political persecution that exacerbates the occupation and its repressive practices, and that the decisions represent a criminalization of civil work and a clear violation of human rights, in addition to being an escalation of aggression against the rights of the Palestinian people and their civil institutions.”

Judicial warfare
 

In December 2019, then-Minister of Defence Naftali Bennett issued several administrative detention orders (Nos 56/19, 57/19 and 58/19) based on the anti-terror law to seize money and bank accounts of dozens of families of Palestinian prisoners who are citizens of Israel.

Israeli authorities claimed that they receive money from the Palestinian Authority (PA), considering it terrorist money according to the occupation's definition, and claiming that they received it as a reward for carrying out "dangerous terrorist operations" by members of these families.

The administrative measures include preventing families from closing their accounts while confiscating funds from their accounts in amounts ranging from thousands to tens of thousands of shekels per family.

 

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