QUESTION
OF THE VIOLATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE OCCUPIED ARAB TERRITORIES, INCLUDING PALESTINE Report
of the Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights, John Dugard, on
the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel
since 1967, submitted in accordance with Commission resolution 1993/2 A
COMMISSION
ON HUMAN RIGHTS Sixtieth session Item 8 of the provisional agenda
8
September 2003
Summary The
situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) continues to be a matter
of grave concern. Although the road map promoted by the Quartet offers some prospect
of peace in the region, it is important to record that the past six months have
seen continued violations of human rights and international humanitarian law.
The Government of Israel has justified its actions in the OPT on the grounds of
self defence and portrayed them as anti-terrorism measures. That Israel has legitimate
security concerns cannot be denied. On the other hand, some limit must be placed
on the violation of human rights in the name of counter-terrorism. A balance must
be struck between respect for human rights and the interests of security.
During the past few months the construction of the Wall, separating Israel from
the West Bank, has been frenetically pursued. The Wall does not follow the Green
Line, which marks the de facto boundary between Israel and Palestine. Instead,
it incorporates substantial areas of the West Bank into Israel. Over 210,000 Palestinians
will be seriously affected by the Wall. Palestinians living between the Wall and
the Green Line will be effectively cut off from their farmlands and workplaces,
schools, health clinics and other social services. This is likely to lead to a
new generation of refugees or internally displaced persons. The Wall has all
the features of a permanent structure. The fact that it will incorporate half
of the settler population in the West Bank and East Jerusalem suggests that it
is designed to further entrench the position of the settlers. The evidence strongly
suggests that Israel is determined to create facts on the ground amounting to
de facto annexation. Annexation of this kind, known as conquest in international
law, is prohibited by the Charter of the United Nations and the Fourth Geneva
Convention. The Special Rapporteur submits that the time has come to condemn the
Wall as an unlawful act of annexation in the same way that Israel's annexation
of East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights has been condemned as unlawful. Similarly,
no recognition should be given by the international community to Israel's control
over Palestinian territory enclosed by the Wall. The restrictions on freedom
of movement continue to create a humanitarian crisis in the OPT. Although curfews
have not affected as many people in 2003 as in the previous year, they still disrupt
Palestinian life on a broad scale. The number of checkpoints has increased during
the past six months. These restraints on the movement of goods and persons give
rise to unemployment, poverty, poor health care and interrupted education and,
in addition, they result in the humiliation of the Palestinian people. The
death toll in the conflict continues to rise as a result of suicide bombings and
military incursions. The Israeli practice of assassinating suspected terrorists
has inflicted death and injury not only on those targeted but on a substantial
number of innocent civilians in the vicinity of such actions. The legality of
such measures is highly questionable. There are some 6,000 Palestinians
in Israeli prisons and detention centres. Although Israel has agreed to release
540 of them, its refusal to release more prisoners constitutes a major obstacle
in the way of peace in the region. Sadly, allegations of torture and inhuman and
degrading treatment continue to be made. The Special Rapporteur therefore calls
for an independent inquiry into such allegations. The destruction of property
in the OPT continues unabated. During the past eight months, Gaza has been particularly
affected by military action that has caused large-scale devastation to houses
and agricultural land. Israel's undertaking to curb the growth of settlements
has not been implemented. On the contrary, settlements have continued to grow
at an unacceptable pace. This phenomenon, together with the construction of the
Wall, suggests that territorial expansion remains an essential feature of Israel's
policies and practices in the OPT. CONTENTS I.
Introduction II. Human rights and terrorism III. Annexation and the
Wall IV. Restrictions on freedom of movement and the humanitarian crisis
V. Loss of life and the killing of civilians VI. Prisoners VII. Destruction
of property VIII. Settlements IX. Conclusion I.
INTRODUCTION 1. The Special Rapporteur visited the Occupied
Palestinian Territory (OPT) and Israel from 22 to 29 June 2003. In the course
of this mission he visited Gaza, Ramallah, Nablus, Bethlehem, Jericho and Jerusalem.
He met with President Arafat, ministers of the Palestinian Authority (PA), members
of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) and the Governor of Nablus, who briefed
him fully on the situation. He also met with prominent Palestinian and Israeli
interlocutors and Palestinian and Israeli non governmental organizations (NGOs)
who informed him about the human rights situation in the OPT. Accompanied by the
Commissioner General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), Peter Hansen, he visited Beit Hanoun in the
Gaza Strip, the scene of massive destruction of homes and agricultural lands.
In Ramallah he visited the Surda and Kalandiya checkpoints, where he observed
the restrictions on freedom of movement imposed on Palestinians. The Wall/Fence/Barrier
(hereinafter "the Wall") separating Israel from the West Bank featured
prominently in the Special Rapporteur's mission. He observed the construction
of the Wall near Jayyous village and Bethlehem. 2. Unfortunately, the Government
of Israel continues to withhold its cooperation from the Special Rapporteur. In
part, the Special Rapporteur's failure to hear the Government's response to the
issues described in this report was overcome by attendance at the presentation
of Israel's second periodic report (CCPR/C/ISR/2001/2) on its compliance with
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) before the Human
Rights Committee on 24 and 25 July 2003. This two-day dialogue between representatives
of the Government and the Human Rights Committee covered many of the issues considered
in the present report and provided the Special Rapporteur with a clear understanding
of the Israeli position. In the course of its presentation, the Government reiterated
its argument that its actions in the OPT are to be measured against the rules
of international humanitarian law and not those of international human rights
law, contained in ICCPR. The Human Rights Committee confirmed that it was unable
to accept this argument and reaffirmed its determination to judge Israel's actions
in terms of both these legal regimes. This remains the approach of the Special
Rapporteur. 3. The Special Rapporteur left the region shortly before the declaration
of a ceasefire by militant groups in the OPT. At the time of writing this report
there is relative calm and there is some ground for hoping that the road map,
leading to peace between Palestine and Israel and the ultimate creation of a Palestinian
State, will succeed. Serious obstacles remain, however, in the way of the successful
implementation of the road map. Most of these obstacles have a human rights dimension
and are discussed in this report. Peace in the region cannot succeed without a
return to the rule of law and respect for human rights and international humanitarian
law. It is unfortunate that the road map, like the Oslo Accords, fails to give
sufficient weight to this factor. 4. Previous reports have followed an all-too-familiar
pattern, describing deaths, detentions, the humanitarian crisis, destruction of
property, the suffering of children and settlements. This report will follow a
different sequence. After the necessary disclaimer of sympathy for terrorism,
the report will focus on two issues that, in the opinion of the Special Rapporteur,
most seriously demand the attention of the international community - the unlawful
annexation of Palestinian territory and the restrictions on freedom of movement.
Thereafter, the report will turn to deaths, detentions, the demolition of property
and settlements which, unhappily, continue to characterize the situation. II.
HUMAN RIGHTS AND TERRORISM 5. At the outset, it is necessary
for the Special Rapporteur to reaffirm his opposition to terrorism and his commitment
to human rights. Many of the rights contained in the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights have been violated by the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) in their
actions against the Palestinian people. Many of the obligations of international
humanitarian law have likewise been violated. These violations are, however, justified
by Israel as action taken in self-defence and legitimate anti-terrorism action.
That Israel has legitimate security concerns cannot be denied. That it is entitled
to take strong action to prevent suicide bombings and other acts of terror is
not disputed. On the other hand, there must be some limit to the extent to which
human rights may be violated in the name of counter-terrorism. Even in the present
international environment, in which anti-terrorism measures challenge old liberties
and freedoms, it is not denied that a balance must be struck between respect for
basic human rights and the interests of security. Here the principle of proportionality
recognized by international humanitarian law has a key role to play. It is not
possible to adopt an armchair attitude in assessing Israel's response to suicide
bombings and Palestinian violence. Israel is entitled to a wide margin of appreciation
in its response. But, even allowing for this, it is suggested, on the basis of
the evidence provided in this report, that Israel's response to terror is disproportionate.
On occasion, Israel's action in the OPT is so remote from the interests of security
that it assumes the character of punishment, humiliation and conquest. III.
ANNEXATION AND THE WALL 6. Language is a powerful instrument.
This explains why words that accurately describe a particular situation are often
avoided out of fear that they will too vividly portray the situation which they
seek to depict. In politics euphemism is often preferred to accuracy in language.
So it is with the Wall that Israel is presently constructing within the territory
of the West Bank. It goes by the name of "Seam Zone", "Security
Fence" or "Separation Wall" . The word "annexation" is
avoided as it is too accurate a description and too unconcerned about the need
to obfuscate the truth in the interests of anti-terrorism measures. However, the
fact must be faced that what we are presently witnessing in the West Bank is a
visible and clear act of territorial annexation under the guise of security. There
may have been no official act of annexation of the Palestinian territory in effect
transferred to Israel by the construction of the Wall, but it is impossible to
avoid the conclusion that we are here faced with annexation of Palestinian territory. 7.
Israel is presently building a wall between Israel and the West Bank that, when
completed, will be some 450 (possibly 650) kilometres in length. At the time of
writing some 150 kilometres have already been completed and building constructors
are working frenetically to finish it as soon as possible. At times this barrier
takes the form of an eight metre high wall (near Qalqiliya). Mostly it takes the
form of a barrier some 60 to 100 metres wide, which includes buffer zones with
trenches and barbed wire, trace paths to register footprints, an electric fence
with sensors to warn of any incursion, a two-lane patrol road and fortified guard
towers at regular intervals. No-go areas of over 100 metres wide on each side
of the barrier will be policed by IDF. Israel has undertaken to install some 27
agricultural crossings and 5 general crossings for traffic and persons through
the barrier but as yet little progress has been made on these crossings. 8.
Possibly, the Wall will assist in the achievement of the Government's publicly
declared goal - to prevent suicide bombers from reaching Israeli territory. Even
this, however, is doubted by some who point to the fact that most suicide bombers
have passed through checkpoints and that the Wall will not deter persons determined
to cross into Israel to commit acts of terrorism. That this is a valid complaint
is borne out by the comment of the Israeli State Comptroller in his report of
July 2002 that "IDF documents indicate that most of the suicide terrorists
and car bombs crossed the seam area into Israel through the checkpoints, where
they underwent faulty and even shoddy checks". 9. The Wall does not follow
the Green Line, that is the 1967 boundary between Israel and Palestine which is
generally accepted as the border between the two entities. Instead, it follows
a route that incorporates substantial parts of Palestine within Israel. At present
the Wall intrudes six to seven kilometres within Palestine, but there are proposals
to penetrate still deeper into Palestinian territory in order to include the settlements
of Ariel, Immanuel and Kedumim. In some places the winding route creates a barrier
that completely encircles Palestinian villages while at many points it separates
Palestinian villages from the rest of the West Bank and converts them into isolated
enclaves. Qalqiliya, a city with a population of 40,000, is completely surrounded
by the Wall and residents can only enter or leave through a single military checkpoint
open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Palestinians between the Wall and the Green Line will
effectively be cut off from their land and workplaces, schools, health clinics
and other social services. Much of the Palestinian land on the Israeli side of
the Wall consists of fertile agricultural land and some of the most important
water wells in the region. The Wall is constructed on Palestinian lands expropriated
by Israeli military order, justified on grounds of military necessity. Many fruit
and olive trees had been destroyed in the course of building the barrier. B'Tselem,
a leading Israeli human rights NGO, estimates that the barrier will cause direct
harm to at least 210,000 Palestinians living in 67 villages, towns and cities. 10.
Palestinians, unconvinced by Israel's assurances that they will be allowed to
pass through the crossings to be erected in the Wall, are moving from their homes
in the affected areas to the security of what remains of Palestine. It is reported
that already some 600 shops and enterprises have closed in Qalqiliya as a result
of the construction of the Wall. The Wall will therefore create a new generation
of refugees or internally displaced persons. 11. It is impossible to give complete
facts about the Wall as its final trajectory is still surrounded in secrecy and
uncertainty. The path of the Wall changes regularly in response to demands from
settlers and other political interest groups within Israel. There is no transparency
surrounding the construction of the Wall and its final course seems to be known
only to an inner circle of the military and political establishment within Israel.
It is, however, widely expected that, following the completion of the Wall separating
Israel from the West Bank on the western side, an eastern wall will be constructed,
along the mountain ridge west of the Jordan Valley, which will separate Palestine
from the Jordan Valley. 12. The Wall must be seen in the context of settlement
activity (discussed later) and the unlawful annexation of East Jerusalem. Settlements
in East Jerusalem and the West Bank are the principal beneficiaries of the Wall
and it is estimated that approximately half of the 400,000 settler population
will be incorporated on the Israeli side of the Wall. Needless to say, it is extraordinary
that such action should be taken to incorporate illegal settlements that form
the subject of negotiations between Israel and Palestine. The Wall will be built
at great cost to Israel: it is projected that US$ 1.4 billion will be spent on
its construction. This simply confirms the permanent nature of the Wall. 13.
The Wall has serious implications for human rights. It further restricts the freedom
of movement of Palestinians, restricts access to health and education facilities
and results in the unlawful taking of Palestinian property. However, the Wall
has more serious implications as it violates two of the most fundamental principles
of contemporary international law: the prohibition on the forcible acquisition
of territory and the right to self-determination. 14. Like the settlements
it seeks to protect, the Wall is manifestly intended to create facts on the ground.
It may lack an act of annexation, as occurred in the case of East Jerusalem and
the Golan Heights. But its effect is the same: annexation. Annexation of this
kind goes by another name in international law - conquest. Conquest, or the acquisition
of territory by the use of force, has been outlawed by the prohibition on the
use of force contained in the Kellogg Briand Pact of 1928 and Article 2, paragraph
4, of the Charter of the United Nations. The prohibition on the acquisition of
territory by force applies irrespective of whether the territory is acquired as
a result of an act of aggression or in self-defence. The Declaration on Principles
of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States
in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations (General Assembly resolution
2625 (XXV) of 24 October 1970, annex) declares that "the territory of a State
shall not be the object of acquisition by another State resulting from the threat
or use of force. No territorial acquisition resulting from the threat or use of
force shall be recognized as legal". This prohibition is confirmed by Security
Council resolution 242 (1967) and the Oslo Accords, which provide that the status
of the West Bank and Gaza shall not be changed pending the outcome of the permanent
status negotiations. The Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian
Persons in Time of War (the Fourth Geneva Convention) provides that protected
persons in an occupied territory shall not be deprived of the benefits of the
Convention "by any annexation
of the occupied territory" (art.
47). 15. The right to self-determination is closely linked to the notion of
territorial sovereignty. A people can only exercise the right of self-determination
within a territory. The amputation of Palestinian territory by the Wall seriously
interferes with the right of self-determination of the Palestinian people as it
substantially reduces the size of the self-determination unit (already small)
within which that right is to be exercised. 16. The Special Rapporteur submits
that the time has come to condemn the Wall as an act of unlawful annexation in
the language of Security Council resolutions 478 (1980) and 497 (1981) which declare
that Israel's actions aimed at the annexation of East Jerusalem and the Golan
Heights are "null and void" and should not be recognized by States.
Israel's claim that the Wall is designed entirely as a security measure with no
intention to alter political boundaries is simply not supported by the facts.
IV. RESTRICTIONS ON FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT AND THE HUMANITARIAN CRISIS 17.
Previous reports have described the serious restrictions on freedom of movement
imposed on the Palestinian people by the Occupying Power. Checkpoints, closures
and curfews are words that fail to capture the full enormity of what is happening
today in the West Bank and Gaza. A checkpoint is not simply a military outpost
on a highway that checks the documents of pedestrians and traffic that seek to
proceed along the road. Every day thousands of Palestinians must pass through
these checkpoints in order to travel from home to work, to reach schools and hospitals
and to visit friends and family. Every day Palestinians are compelled to waste
hours passing through these checkpoints. Frequently, Palestinians are obliged
to leave their vehicles at one checkpoint and to walk along dusty roads to another
checkpoint to take a taxi to their destination. Accounts of rudeness, humiliation
and brutality at the checkpoints are legion. Ambulances are often delayed and
women give birth to children at checkpoints. Checkpoints are not so much a security
measure for ensuring that would-be suicide bombers do not enter Israel, but rather
the institutionalization of the humiliation of the Palestinian people. Similarly,
a curfew is not simply a restriction on leaving one's home. It is the imprisonment
of the people within their own homes. Unable to go to work, to buy food, to go
to school, to visit hospitals or to bury their dead, they are confined within
the walls of their own homes while the IDF patrols their streets. Statistics of
checkpoints and curfews cannot accurately portray the obscenity of the situation.
Unfortunately, Israelis are protected from seeing what their army is doing to
their subjugated neighbour by laws that restrict Israelis from seeing what is
happening. The acclaimed Palestinian author, Raja Shehadeh, described the situation
in his recent book When the Bulbul Stops Singing: A Diary of Ramallah Under Siege:
"During the first intifada, the movement of both people into the land of
the other continued to be possible.
All sorts of relations developed between
the people on the two sides of the divide. None of this has been possible this
time. With the exception of a few determined Israeli journalists, it was left
to the army to present to the Israeli people the reality of the Occupied Territories.
The prohibition against travel by both sides to each other's territories meant
that the demonization could continue unchallenged." 18. The task of the
Special Rapporteur is to report on facts. Curfews continue, but without the severity
of 2002. From November 2002 to April 2003, an average of 390,000 civilians were
under curfew compared with 520,000 in the second half of 2002. However, people
under curfew in Hebron, Jenin and parts of Gaza were frequently under tighter
and more continuous curfew in 2003. 19. There are some 300 checkpoints or roadblocks,
including about 140 checkpoints manned by the military. However, in late July
2003 a number of roadblocks were removed within the context of the implementation
of the road map. Checkpoints vary in nature and include permanent checkpoints,
mobile checkpoints, unmanned roadblocks, dirt walls, earth mounds, concrete blocks,
iron gates and trenches dug around villages and towns. Sometimes tanks or military
vehicles are used as roadblocks. These checkpoints or roadblocks, around every
town and major road junction, divide the OPT internally. Eight commercial checkpoints
divide the West Bank into the separate cantons of Hebron, Bethlehem, Jericho,
Ramallah, Nablus, Tulkarem, Qalqiliya and Jenin. Each district has one official
commercial entrance. Commercial goods must be unloaded and transferred to another
vehicle on the other side of the checkpoint ("back-to-back transport").
Checkpoints for ordinary people likewise sometimes require back-to-back transfer.
These checkpoints divide the West Bank into a patchwork of cantons. Since March
2002, permits have been required to travel from one district to another. Gaza
is totally isolated from the rest of Palestine. It too, however, is partitioned
into three separate cantons by checkpoints. These measures have not prevented
the movement of militants between different towns or regions or between Palestine
and Israel. They do not protect settlements which are already well protected by
the IDF. Instead, internal checkpoints restrict internal trade within the OPT
and restrict the entire population from travelling from village to village or
town to town. They must therefore be seen as a form of collective punishment.
Writing in Ha'aretz on 27 July 2003, the columnist Gideon Levy wrote that the
purpose of checkpoints is "to make the lives of the local residents as miserable
as possible". Unfortunately, the Israeli representatives appearing before
the Human Rights Committee on 24 and 25 July 2003 made no serious attempt to address
the issue of checkpoints. Indeed, there seemed to be no appreciation on their
part of the hardships and humiliation caused by checkpoints. 20. Checkpoints,
closures and curfews have had a major impact on the Palestinian economy. According
to a World Bank report of May 2003, "The bulk of Palestinian economic losses
stem from closure and curfew." This has resulted in unemployment (which now
stands at 40 per cent in the West Bank and Gaza) and poverty (60 per cent of the
people live on less than US$ 2 per day; 2 million live in poverty, dependent on
food from international donor agencies). Checkpoints and curfews have also led
to a drop in health standards resulting from inability to access hospitals and
clinics, the impossibility of carrying out health-care programmes (for example,
vaccinations) and the psychological trauma arising from the physical, economic
and social consequences of occupation. Checkpoints have also resulted in the failure
to acquire nutritious food and sufficient clean water. The obstruction of ambulances
at checkpoints remains a serious problem. In the past year, about 60 ambulances
per month were held up at checkpoints of which a quarter were denied passage.
In March 2003, 15 ambulances were fired upon. Children have suffered dramatically.
Schools are closed by curfew and checkpoints make it difficult for both teachers
and children to reach schools. Twenty-two per cent of children under the age of
5 suffer from acute or chronic malnutrition while the breakdown of family life
has had a severe impact on children. 21. There is a humanitarian crisis in
the West Bank and Gaza. It is not the result of a natural disaster. Instead, it
is a crisis imposed by a powerful State on its neighbour. V.
LOSS OF LIFE AND THE KILLING OF CIVILIANS 22. For both
human rights law and international humanitarian law the protection of human life
is a primary goal. Article 6 (1) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights states that "Every human being has the inherent right to life. This
right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life."
While accepting that combatants engaged in armed conflict would be exposed to
life-threatening situations, international humanitarian law seeks to limit harm
to civilians by requiring that all parties to a conflict respect the principles
of distinction and proportionality. The principle of distinction, codified in
article 48 of Protocol I Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949,
requires that "the Parties to the conflict shall at all times distinguish
between the civilian population and combatants and between civilian objects and
military objectives and accordingly shall direct their operations only against
military objectives". Acts or threats of violence the primary purpose of
which is to spread terror among the civilian population, are prohibited (art.
51 (2)). The principle of proportionality, codified in article 51 (5) (b), prohibits
an attack on a military target "which may be expected to cause incidental
loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, [or] damage to civilian objects
which would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage
anticipated". That these principles apply to both Israelis and Palestinians
was confirmed by the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention
when, in a declaration issued on 5 December 2001, they called upon both parties
to the conflict to: "
ensure respect for and protection of the civilian
population and civilian objects and to distinguish at all times between the civilian
population and combatants and between civilian objects and military objectives." 23.
Sadly, neither party to the conflict in the region has paid proper respect to
these principles as the death toll has continued to rise. Since the start of the
second intifada in September 2000, over 2,755 Palestinians and over 830 Israelis
have been killed and 28,000 Palestinians and 5,600 Israelis have been injured.
Most have been civilians. Five hundred and fifty children have been killed, of
whom 460 were Palestinians and 90 Israelis. The number of Palestinian children
killed, mainly in air and ground attacks, has increased in 2003. Within Israel,
most deaths have been caused by suicide bombers. 24. The assassination of Palestinian
militants has intensified. From October 2000 to April 2003, the IDF has killed
more than 230 Palestinians, including 80 children, women and innocent bystanders,
in assassination actions. Over 300 persons have been injured in these actions.
In the period 10-14 June 2003, the IDF killed 27 Palestinians and wounded dozens
of others in a series of extrajudicial killings carried out by helicopter gunships
in the Gaza Strip. These attacks included an unsuccessful assassination attempt
on Dr. Abdel Aziz Al-Rantisi, a senior political leader of Hamas. Four people
were killed and 35 injured while 29 nearby apartments were damaged. On 12 June
2003, IDF helicopters bombarded the car of Yasser Taha. He was immediately killed,
together with his wife and young daughter. In addition, five other civilians were
killed in the attack and 36 were wounded, including 10 children. 25. In June
2003, a number of NGOs commenced legal proceedings to stop assassinations. This
matter is still before the Israeli High Court of Justice, which has refused a
request for a temporary injunction against further assassinations. Judge Antonio
Cassese, former President of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia, has submitted an expert opinion to the Court in which he asserts that
assassinations of this kind could be considered as war crimes. In his opinion,
he maintains that the killing of civilians suspected of terror activity, when
no direct belligerent operation in which they are involved is taking place, substantively
infringes the basic principle that armed forces must distinguish between combatants
and civilians. He further argues that suspects should be arrested and tried, which
is often possible in the light of Israel's control of the OPT. 26. Israel justifies
its policy and practice of assassinations on grounds of self-defence and claims
that it is not possible to arrest and try suspects, particularly where they are
in areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The evidence on this point is
inconclusive as there are certainly some instances in which arrests could have
been made in the light of Israel's capacity to exercise its jurisdictional power
within the areas controlled in theory by the Palestinian Authority. The failure
to attempt such arrests inevitably gives rise to suspicions that Israel lacks
evidence to place such persons on trial and therefore prefers to dispose of them
arbitrarily. 27. The indiscriminate use of violence is further illustrated
by the use of flechette shells in Gaza. The use of such anti-personnel weapons
in such a densely populated area as Gaza exposes civilians to great risk and fails
to take account of the need to distinguish between civilians and military objectives.
On 27 April 2003, the Israeli High Court of Justice refused to intervene in the
army's choice of weapons because flechettes are not banned outright under international
law. 28. The failure of the IDF to investigate crimes committed by its members
in the OPT has long been criticized. In June 2003, this criticism was confirmed
when the Judge Advocate General stated that a mere 55 investigations into shooting
incidents had been opened since the beginning of the second intifada, resulting
in only six indictments. VI. PRISONERS 29.
At the time of writing this report, there are some 6,000 Palestinians in Israeli
prisons and detention centres. Some have been tried, some have not. The number
of those detained includes 175 juveniles and 70 women. Approximately 800 persons
are held in administrative detention, that is detention by administrative order
rather than judicial procedure. The issue of prisoners has become a major obstacle
in the implementation of the road map. Israel is reluctant to release more than
540 prisoners while the Palestinian Authority demands that all prisoners be released. 30.
There are serious complaints about the treatment of prisoners that are supported
in varying degrees by respectable non-governmental organizations such as the Public
Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI), the World Organization against Torture
(OMCT), the Defence for Children International - Palestine Section, LAW - The
Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights and the Environment, Al-Haq
and the Mandela Institute For Human Rights. These complaints cover all prisons
and detention centres and include men, women and children held in imprisonment
as well as administrative detainees. On the one hand, these complaints cover allegations
of overcrowding, disgusting prison conditions and lack of proper medical care.
On the other hand, they include serious allegations of inhuman and degrading treatment,
sometimes amounting to torture. 31. In 1999 the Israeli High Court of Justice
ruled that various methods of torture employed by the General Security Service
(GSS), such as violent shaking, covering the head with a sack, tying to a small
tilted chair or position abuse (shabeh), sleep deprivation and painful shackling
were, when applied cumulatively, illegal. Despite this, there is considerable
evidence that these methods are still employed during the interrogation of adults
and juveniles. In a publication entitled Back to a Routine of Torture covering
the period September 2001 to April 2003, PCATI estimated that for the first half
of 2003, "each month, hundreds of Palestinians have been subjected to one
degree or another of torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, at
the hands of the GSS and bodies working on its behalf.
The bodies which
are supposed to keep the GSS under scrutiny and ensure that interrogations are
conducted lawfully act, instead, as rubber stamps for decisions by the GSS".
These allegations are difficult to reconcile with the assurance given by the representatives
of the Israeli Government before the Human Rights Committee on 24 and 25 July
2003 that allegations of this kind had been properly investigated and proved to
be unfounded or justified on grounds of necessity. 32. The Special Rapporteur
finds himself in an awkward situation when it comes to assessing evidence of this
kind. Allegations of torture and inhuman treatment are supported in varying degrees
by highly respected NGOs that have taken statements from former prisoners and
consulted with lawyers working within the system. Moreover, there are serious
doubts about the impartiality of the investigations of these complaints carried
out by the Israeli authorities. The Special Rapporteur is denied access to Israeli
prisons and detention centres and to government officials who might assist in
the task of assessing the validity of allegations on this subject. The Special
Rapporteur therefore urgently calls upon the Israeli authorities either to permit
an independent international committee to investigate such complaints or to conduct
a full-scale independent judicial inquiry into such allegations itself. It has
often been said that the degree of civilization of a State can be measured by
the way in which it treats prisoners. At present Israel, which prides itself on
a high standard of criminal justice within its own borders, runs the risk of forfeiting
this reputation by its consistent refusal to respond to criticisms of treatment
of prisoners from the OPT. VII. DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY 33.
The destruction of property in the OPT continues unabated. Three principal reasons
are advanced by Israel for the destruction of homes and agricultural property.
First, the interests of security or military necessity may require houses to be
destroyed and agricultural land to be cleared ("shaved" or "swept")
to prevent such houses or trees from being used to provide cover for militants
bent on attacking settlements or IDF positions. This has resulted in the creation
of wide buffer zones adjacent to settlements and roads used by settlers. Secondly,
the homes of those who have committed crimes against Israel are destroyed by way
of punishment (although the Israeli Government prefers to describe this as a form
of deterrence). Thirdly, houses built without administrative permission, in a
system in which permits are seldom granted, are destroyed to assert respect for
Israel's administrative regime. These three reasons have been invoked by the Israeli
authorities to destroy thousands of homes and to lay bare vast areas of fertile
agricultural land. 34. The situation is particularly acute in Gaza. According
to the Commissioner-General of UNRWA, "At the end of May 2003, a total of
1,134 homes [had] been demolished by the Israeli military in the Gaza Strip, making
almost 10,000 individuals homeless. Unfortunately, this is not a policy on the
wane. During the first two years of the intifada, the average number of homes
demolished in Gaza - a statistical category both depressing and surreal - was
32 per month. Since the start of 2003, the average has risen to 72. Disturbingly,
the publication of the road map to peace has so far had no impact." The Special
Rapporteur had the opportunity to observe the devastation caused in Beit Hanoun
at first hand when he visited on 24 June 2003. Parts of this town had been reduced
to a wasteland as a result of the destruction of homes and orchards. It appears
that this act of large-scale devastation was in part a punitive measure taken
against homes and orchards in the neighbourhood of a roadside bomb aimed at an
Israeli military vehicle. 35. The collective punishment of Palestinians in
the form of destruction of property has had serious consequences for the Palestinian
people and the environment of Palestine. According to Jeff Halper, the Director
of the Israeli Committee against House Demolitions, "The bulldozer has become
as much a symbol of Israeli occupation as the rifle and the tank". VIII.
SETTLEMENTS 36. The international community is united in
its opposition to Israeli settlements in the OPT. It has repeatedly described
them as being in violation of the sixth paragraph of article 49 of the Fourth
Geneva Convention which prohibits the Occupying Power from transferring parts
of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies. The road map makes
it clear that the dismantling of settlements is an important issue in the resolution
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 37. There are at present some 200 settlements
in the OPT containing a total population of over 400,000. In the West Bank there
are more than 120 settlements with over 230,000 settlers, while in the Gaza Strip
there are 16 settlements with some 7,000 settlers. About 180,000 settlers live
in the neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem. Settlements often comprise fully developed
towns and villages. For instance, Ma'aleh Adumim has a population 28,000 settlers.
Roads constructed to link settlements with each other and to allow access to Israel
have also resulted in the taking of Palestinian land. 38. Israel has given
an equivocal undertaking to restrict the growth of settlements to "natural
growth" and to dismantle "unauthorized settlements", that is outposts
and extensions to existing settlements not authorized under Israeli law. Despite
this, new settlements are being built, as the Special Rapporteur saw on several
occasions, and existing settlements continue to grow. The population growth in
the settlements is three times that of Israel itself. In 2002, the population
in the Israeli settlements in the West Bank grew by 5.7 per cent compared with
1.9 per cent in Israel. The Israeli Government continues to offer financial inducements
to Israelis to settle in the OPT and in 2003 Israel budgeted 1.9 billion new Israeli
shekels for settlements. Further evidence of the determination of the Israeli
Government to entrench the settlements is provided by the erection of the Wall
(discussed in chap. III above), the continued clearing of Palestinian land within
the proximity of settlements for security purposes and the allocation of heavy
military resources to protect settlements. (For example, the 532 settlers who
live in the centre of Hebron are protected by some 100 Israeli soldiers.) 39.
Settlements fragment Palestinian territory and seriously undermine the prospects
for Palestinian self-determination within a viable territorial unit. A recent
study carried out by B'Tselem estimates that 41.9 per cent of the total land area
of the West Bank is effectively under the control of settlements, including developed
areas, non-developed municipal areas and land reserves. 40. The harsh truth
is that there is no "freeze" on the construction or growth of settlements.
Moreover, the Israeli Government is taking no steps to reverse this pattern of
growth. A poll conducted by the Israeli group "Peace Now" in July 2003
has shown that 74 per cent of the settlers in the OPT would leave their homes
in return for compensation. If the Israeli Government were serious about its undertaking
to halt the growth of settlements, it might give serious attention to budgeting
funds for the repatriation of settlers and their compensation rather than allocating
such substantial funding to the settlements and to the building of the Wall. IX.
CONCLUSION 41. The occupation of the OPT continues to result
in widespread violations of human rights, affecting both civil and socio-economic
rights, and of international humanitarian law. Israel's justification for these
actions is that they are necessary in the interests of its own national security.
As indicated at the beginning of this report, the lawfulness of Israel's response
is to be measured in accordance with the principle of proportionality. The Special
Rapporteur finds it difficult to accept that the excessive use of force that disregards
the distinction between civilians and combatants, the creation of a humanitarian
crisis by restrictions on the mobility of goods and people, the killing and inhuman
treatment of children, the widespread destruction of property and, now, territorial
expansion can be justified as a proportionate response to the violence and threats
of violence to which Israel is subjected. As stressed in this report, the construction
of the Wall within the West Bank and the continued expansion of settlements, which,
on the face of it, have more to do with territorial expansion, de facto annexation
or conquest, raise serious doubts about the good faith of Israel's justifications
in the name of security. Notes 1) In Palestine,
the term "Apartheid Wall" is frequently used to describe the Wall. Strictly
speaking, this historical metaphor is inaccurate as no wall of this kind was erected
between Black and White in apartheid South Africa. 2) State Comptroller,
Audit Report on the Seam Area, p. 35. 3) Israeli-Palestinian Interim
Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, 28 September 1995, chap. 5, art.
XXXI, para. 7. 4) Also published as When the Birds Stopped Singing: Life
in Ramallah Under Seige. 5) Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures
and Palestinian Economic Crisis: An Assessment, The World Bank West Bank and
Gaza Office, Jerusalem, chap. 2, para. 2.5. 6) B'Tselem Newspaper,
29 June 2003. 7) International Herald Tribune, 23 June 2003. 8)
The Jerusalem Post, 28 July 2003. - End -
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