( Human Rights Watch ) – This memorandum provides an overview of several of Human Rights Watch’s central concerns with respect to the Israeli government’s human rights practices in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), submitted to the United Nations Human Rights Committee in advance of its review of Israel in March 2022. This submission, which draws on years of research and documentation by Human Rights Watch, covers freedom of movement, the right to due process and humane treatment, freedom of peaceful assembly, association and expression, residency rights, and right to equality before law. We hope it will inform the Human Rights Committee’s assessment of the Israeli government’s compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
Introduction: Human Rights in Prolonged Occupation & Israel’s Treatment of Palestinians
The Convention applies to Israel’s conduct towards Palestinians in the OPT, alongside international humanitarian law governing occupation. While Israel maintains that its human rights obligations do not extend to the OPT, the Human Rights Committee has repeatedly found that states are bound to respect the human rights treaties they have ratified outside their state borders, and specifically that “the provisions of the Covenant apply to the benefit of the population of the occupied territories.”
While the law of occupation permits occupiers to restrict civil and political rights, it also requires them to restore public life for the occupied population. That obligation increases in a prolonged occupation, where the occupier has more time and opportunity to develop more narrowly tailored responses to security threats that minimize restrictions on rights. In addition, the needs of the occupied population increase over time, particular as regards civil rights: suspending virtually all rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association for a short period interrupts temporarily normal public life, but long-term, indefinite suspension of rights has a much more debilitating impact. Social and intellectual stagnation results from the denial of free expression and debate, access to diverse information, and the opportunity to peacefully demand change.
Al Jazeera English: “Israel imposing ‘apartheid’ on Palestinians: Amnesty”
After more than 50 years of occupation with no end in sight, Israel should fully respect the human rights of Palestinians, using as a benchmark the rights it grants Israeli citizens. In a December 2019 report entitled “Born Without Civil Rights,” Human Rights Watch sets out the legal foundations for this obligation given the duration of its occupation under international humanitarian law.
Israel should accept the applicability of the ICCPR and other international human rights law to the OPT.
Human Rights Watch has found that Israeli authorities are committing the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution against millions of Palestinians.
Freedom of Movement in Gaza and the West Bank (Article 12)
Since its last ICCPR review in 2014, Israel has continued to impose sweeping restrictions on the movement of the more than 4.7 million Palestinians in the OPT that fail any reasonable test of balancing Israel’s security against the human right to freedom of movement.
Closure of Gaza
For the last 25 years, Israel has increasingly restricted the movement of Gaza residents. Since 2007, the year that Hamas seized effective political control over the Strip from the Fatah-led PA, Israel has imposed a generalized travel ban on movement in and out of the small territory with few exceptions. The Israeli army since 2007 has limited travel through the Erez Crossing, the passenger crossing from Gaza to the other part of the OPT, the West Bank, and abroad, as well as to Israel. Israel has limited passage to cases presenting what it deems “exceptional humanitarian circumstances,” meaning mainly those needing vital medical treatment outside Gaza and their companions, although authorities also grant permits each year to hundreds of Gaza residents eligible on other grounds, such as high-level businesspeople and merchants.
Israeli authorities have also for more than two decades sharply restricted the use by Palestinians of Gaza’s airspace and territorial waters. They blocked reopening an airport that Palestinians once operated there, and building a seaport, leaving Palestinians dependent on leaving Gaza by land in order to travel abroad.
Israel restricts all travel between Gaza and the West Bank, despite its having recognized the two to be part of a single territorial unit,
Israeli authorities often justify the closure on security grounds. Authorities have said in particular that they want to minimize travel between Gaza and the West Bank to prevent transferring “a human terrorist network” from Gaza to the West Bank, the latter of which has a porous border with Israel and is home to hundreds of thousands of Israeli settlers.
These restrictions violate the rights of Palestinians under Article 12 of the ICCPR to freedom of movement and residence, in particular within the OPT, and the right to leave one own’s country, that Israel can restrict only in response to concrete, specific security threats. Israel’s policy to presumptively deny free movement, with narrow exceptions, based on generalized security threats and irrespective of any individualized assessment of the security risk of the individual fail any reasonable test of balancing Israel’s security concerns against the human right to freedom of movement. While Israel has legitimate security concerns in regulating entry to its territory, those concerns cannot justify the massive violation of the rights that the near-total ban inflicts on the more than two million Palestinians living in a sliver of territory.
Permit Regime in the West Bank
Israeli authorities have also imposed onerous restrictions on freedom of movement in the West Bank, it says for “substantive security reasons” given that “Palestinian residents from the region carried out… hundreds of deadly terrorist attacks.”
When it comes to travel abroad, Palestinians in the West Bank must travel via Jordan through the Israeli-controlled Allenby Crossing, unless they receive a difficult-to-secure permit to leave from Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv. But Israeli authorities sometimes ban them from using that crossing on unspecified security grounds.
While countries have wide latitude to restrict entry at their own borders, Israel largely restricts movement of the occupied population not only to travel between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, even when it does not take place through Israel, but also within the West Bank itself. Israeli authorities, for example, have erected nearly 600 permanent obstacles, such as checkpoints and roadblocks, within the West Bank, according to OCHA.
The severe movement restrictions in the West Bank, in particular the permit regime and restrictions on movement within the OPT, restrict the rights of Palestinians under Article 12 of the ICCPR to freedom of movement and residence.
The Human Rights Committee should call upon the Government of Israel to:
- End the generalized ban on travel to and from Gaza and permit the free movement of people to and from Gaza, and in particular between Gaza and the West Bank, and abroad, subject to, at most, individual screenings and physical searches for security purposes.
- Permit Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza to move freely into East Jerusalem, subject to, at most, individual screenings and physical searches for security purposes.
- Dismantle the segments of the Separation Barrier not built along the Green Line but, rather, inside the OPT.
Rights to Free Assembly, Association and Expression in the West Bank (Article, 18,19, 21)
Israeli continues to deprive Palestinians in the OPT of their basic civil rights, including the rights to free assembly, association and expression. In particular, authorities have targeted Palestinians for their anti-occupation speech, activism and affiliations, jailing thousands, outlawing hundreds of political and nongovernment organizations, and shutting down dozens of media outlets.
In the West Bank, the army continues to rely on draconian military orders issued in the early days of the occupation to criminalize non-violent political activity. Authorities, for example, continue to apply British Mandate-era regulations that allow them to declare unlawful groups that advocate “bringing into hatred or contempt of, or the exciting of disaffection against” local authorities and to arrest Palestinians for affiliation with such groups.
For example, Israeli authorities have jailed Khalida Jarrar, a 56-year-old member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, for most of the last six years over her political activism with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). One of the hundreds of outlawed organizations, the PFLP includes both a political party and an armed wing. The armed wing has attacked Israeli soldiers and civilians. Israeli authorities have never charged Khalida with involvement in armed activities. Khalida spent long stretches, including between July 2017 and February 2019, in administrative detention without trial and charge based on her PFLP affiliation.
The army also regularly uses military orders permitting it to shut down unlicensed protests or to create closed military zones to suppress peaceful Palestinian demonstrations in the West Bank and detain participants. One military order, for example, imposes prison terms of up to 10 years on civilians convicted by military courts for participating in a gathering of more than 10 people without a military permit on any issue “that could be construed as political” or displaying “flags or political symbols” without army approval. The Israeli army said that, in the five-year period between July 1, 2014 and June 30, 2019, it prosecuted 4,590 West Bank Palestinians for entering a “closed military zone,” a designation often used for protest sites.
For example, the Israeli army in 2016 detained human rights defender Farid al-Atrash, who works at the Independent Commission of Human Rights, a quasi-official body of the Palestinian Authority, during a peaceful demonstration in Hebron that called for re-opening a main downtown street that the army prohibits Palestinians from accessing. Prosecutors charged him for “demonstrating without a permit” and for “attempt[ing] to influence public opinion in the Area in a manner that may harm public order or safety” through “inciting” chants and “waving Palestinian Authority flags” and holding a sign that read “Open Shuhada Street.” Prosecutors further accused him of entering “a closed military zone” and “assault[ing]” a soldier, but furnished no actual evidence to substantiate these claims outside his non-violent participation in the demonstration. Authorities released al-Atrash on bail four days after his arrest, but continued to prosecute him for his participation in this event years later.
The army has further cited the broad definition of incitement in its military laws, defined to include “praise, sympathy or support for a hostile organization” and “attempts, orally or otherwise, to influence public opinion in the Area in a manner which may harm public peace or public order,” to criminalize speech merely opposing its occupation.
Military prosecutors, for example, in early 2018 claimed in an indictment against activist Nariman Tamimi that she “attempted to influence public opinion in the Area in a manner that may harm public order and safety” and “called for violence” over a livestream she posted to her Facebook account in 2017” of a confrontation between her then-16-year-old daughter Ahed and Israeli soldiers in her front yard in December 2017. Her indictment notes a series of charges based on the livestream, including “incitement,” noting that the video was “viewed by thousands of users, shared by dozens of users, received dozens of responses and many dozens of likes.” Human Rights Watch reviewed the video and case file, and nowhere in the video or case file does Nariman call for violence.
These restrictions violate Israel’s core obligations under the ICCPR, including Articles 18, 19 and 21. Israeli military orders that concern assembly, association and expression do not offer sufficient clarity to allow Palestinians to know what actions may result in criminal consequences and how to conform their behavior to abide by the law, violating a basic principle of international human rights law. Core concepts like “incitements” are so vaguely defined that individuals cannot reasonably predict whether an action or inaction amounts to a crime.
In addition, while the Convention permits, as subsequently clarified by the Human Rights Committee and OHCHR,
The Human Rights Committee should call upon the Government of Israel to:
- Cease arresting and detaining people for the nonviolent exercise of their rights to free assembly, association and expression.
- Grant Palestinians living in the occupied West Bank full protection of the rights guaranteed to all people under international human rights law, using as a benchmark the rights it grants Israeli citizens, as well as the protections they are owed under international humanitarian law.
- Repeal Military Orders 101 and 1651 and refrain from charging defendants under the Defense (Emergency) Regulations of 1945
Israel’s Excessive Use of Force (Art. 6, 21)
Israeli forces stationed on the Israeli side of the fences separating Gaza and Israel responded with excessive lethal force to weekly demonstrations for Palestinian rights on the Gaza side that took place for much of 2018 and 2019. Snipers killed, according to OCHA, 214 Palestinian demonstrators, many of them more than one hundred meters away, and injured by live fire more than 8,000 more, including 156 whose limbs had to be amputated.
The Israeli government’s use of excessive lethal force against demonstrators inside Gaza not only violates the rights of those killed to the right of life under Art. 6, but the rights of Palestinians living there to peaceful assembly under Article 21.
The Human Rights Committee should urge the Israeli government to:
- Issue regulations that clearly prohibit the use of lethal force except in situations where it is necessary to prevent an imminent threat to death or serious injury.
Israeli Detention & the Right to Due Process, Humane Treatment (Article 9, 10)
Israeli authorities have continued to incarcerate Palestinians for what it deems “security offenses,” including hundreds at any given time held in administrative detention based on secret evidence without charge or trial for renewable periods that can extend for multiple years.
Israeli authorities have for decades mistreated and tortured Palestinian detainees.
These policies and practice fall afoul of the ICCPR’s guarantees of the right to liberty and security (Art. 9) and humane and dignified treatment (Art. 10). While Israel in 1991 derogated from Article 9, to the extent that it prohibits measures undertaken pursuant to the state of emergency it proclaimed in May 1948, that derogation should be understood in the context of the duration of the occupation. The longer the occupation, the greater the ability and therefore the obligation of occupiers to refine responses to security threats that minimize restrictions of the rights and freedoms of the local population.
The Human Rights Committee has stated, “the fundamental guarantee against arbitrary detention is non-derogable, insofar as even situations covered by article 4 cannot justify a deprivation of liberty that is unreasonable or unnecessary under the circumstances.”
The Human Rights Committee should call upon the Government of Israel to:
- Cease its widespread practice of holding Palestinians in administrative detention without trial or charge
- Treat all detainees with humanity and with respect for their inherent dignity
Right of Residency (Article 12)
Israeli authorities have denied millions of Palestinians residency rights through its control over population registries, the granting of legal status and residency rights, and entry and exit to Israel and the OPT.
West Bank and Gaza
Israeli policies on Palestinian residency have arbitrarily denied hundreds of thousands of Palestinians of the ability to live in, and travel to and from, the West Bank and Gaza. Israeli restrictions on residency separate families, bar thousands from returning to their homes in the OPT, trap others inside their homes or parts of the OPT, and block yet others from pursuing educational or economic opportunities.
Israeli authorities have primarily done so through their ongoing control of the population registry – the list of Palestinians whom it considers lawful residents of the OPT. Israel requires Palestinians to be included in the population registry in order to obtain Israeli-sanctioned identification cards and passports, which allow Palestinians to reside, work and inherit property, but do not convey citizenship or nationality. Israeli security forces manning checkpoints and borders require Palestinians to present an identification card or passport before allowing passage for travel within the OPT, including to schools, jobs, hospitals or to visit family, and abroad.
Israeli authorities base the population registry on a census it conducted in the West Bank and Gaza in September 1967, several months after it took control of these areas. The census counted 954,898 Palestinians as physically present,
Between 1967 and 1994, Israeli authorities struck from the registry thousands of Palestinians who traveled and stayed abroad for long periods. During this period, it permanently cancelled the registry of 140,000 registered Palestinians, solely because they left the West Bank for a period of more than three years, according to data from Office of the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT). Authorities also during this same period revoked the residency of 108,878 Palestinians from Gaza either for staying abroad for more than seven years or not being present during censuses conducted in 1981 and 1988.
Soon after its establishment, the PA took on the task of handling requests to update the population registry or apply for residency, but their role consists of transferring those requests to the Israeli side for approval.
The freeze has remained in place since 2000, outside of processing about 35,000 family unification applications in the late 2000s and several thousand applications in late 2021 and early 2022 as gestures to the PA.
Israeli authorities have also systematically barred entry to Israel and the West Bank over the last two decades of non-registered Palestinians who lived or used to live in the West Bank and their non-registered spouses and other family members.
Israel’s refusal to update the population registry has applied even to requests to change addresses, which made the presence of Palestinians living in the West Bank, but registered in Gaza, illegal.
Revocations of Jerusalem Residency
Israeli policies have also denied residency rights to thousands of Palestinians in East Jerusalem. Since its annexation of East Jerusalem in 1967, it has applied its 1952 Law of Entry to Palestinians from there and designated them as “permanent residents,” the same status afforded to a foreigner who wants to live in Israel. Permanent residents may live, work, and receive benefits, but that status derives from their presence, can be revoked at the Interior Ministry’s discretion and does not automatically pass to one’s children or non-resident spouse even if they have lived in Jerusalem for years.
Between the start of Israel’s occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967 and the end of 2020, Israel revoked the permanent resident status of at least 14,701 Palestinians from East Jerusalem.
Each revocation often has much wider impact, as the families of persons who lose their status often accompany them as they leave the city and other Palestinians have to adjust their lives to safeguard their precarious status. Palestinians from East Jerusalem have told Human Rights Watch that the fear of losing this status weighs on their daily life, determining where families live and deterring them from pursuing educational and professional opportunities abroad.
Israeli law authorizes arrest and deportation for those found without legal status. Without that status, Palestinians cannot formally work, move freely, renew driver’s licenses, or obtain birth certificates for children, which are needed to register them in school. They could also lose benefits under Israel’s national insurance program, which provides social welfare benefits such as health care, unemployment benefits, and support payments for children, the elderly, and people with disabilities. Those who lose their residency can petition the Interior Ministry to recover their status, during which time they can obtain a temporary status to remain in Jerusalem. Some Palestinians have succeeded in reinstating their status, but only after protracted legal and administrative processes that many cannot afford.
In a March 2017 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that Palestinians from East Jerusalem enjoy “special status” as “native residents” that authorities should account for in determining their status.
Effective Ban on Granting Status to Palestinian Spouses from the OPT
Israel’s Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law (Temporary Order)—2003 bars Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza from residing with their spouse in Israel or East Jerusalem.
In July 2021, the Knesset in July failed to renew the temporary order. Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked, though, instructed authorities to continue to act as if the law was in place while the Interior Ministry examines the implications of its expiration, prolonging the separation of many families.
This policy denies Israeli citizens and residents, both Jewish and Palestinian, who marry Palestinian residents of the West Bank and Gaza the right enjoyed by other Israelis to live with their loved ones in the place of their choosing. This denial is based on the spouse’s identity rather than on an individualized assessment of security risk. If an Israeli marries a foreign spouse who is Jewish, the spouse is granted citizenship automatically; other foreigners normally become eligible for citizenship after living in Israel for a minimum of four years.
Israeli officials have openly justified the law by pointing to demographics. Ariel Sharon, commenting in 2005 when he was prime minister, on the renewal of the temporary law, said, “There’s no need to hide behind security arguments. There’s a need for the existence of a Jewish state.”
The law forces a difficult choice for the thousands of couples – 30,000 where one spouse is a Palestinian citizen of Israel, according to the Haifa-based human rights group the Mossawa Center – who marry despite these restrictions. They must either live separately or have the Israeli citizen or resident spouse move to the West Bank, despite Israeli military orders prohibiting Israelis from living in Area A.
Moving to the OPT has led Palestinian Jerusalemites to lose their residency status and jeopardizes the eligibility of both Israeli citizens and residents to exercise rights related to residency or citizenship such as the right to receive social security benefits. This difficult choice has splintered thousands of Palestinian and mixed families.
Palestinian Refugees
Israel’s Citizenship Law of 1952 denies citizenship and residency rights to the more than 700,000 Palestinians who resided before 1948 in the territory that is now Israel and who fled or were expelled during the events of 1948, and to their descendants.
Israel’s policies that deny millions of Palestinians – Jerusalemites, those from the West Bank and Gaza and refugees – the ability to live in Israel and the OPT and, in some cases, travel to and from them, constitute measures that restrict the right of residency, as set out under Article 12 of the ICCPR. While the ICCPR permits restrictions to “protect national security, public order (ordre public), public health or morals or the rights and freedoms of others,” these restrictions, undertaken with a discriminatory purpose and affecting only Palestinians and not Jewish Israelis, far exceed what the Convention permits.
The Human Rights Committee should call upon the Government of Israel to:
- Remove arbitrary restrictions on residency rights for Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip and their families, including by stopping the practice of revoking the residency of Palestinians in East Jerusalem, ending the effective freeze on family reunification applications in the West Bank and Gaza since 2000, and allowing Palestinians to resettle in other parts of the OPTs and register their residences at their new addresses.
- Lift the effective ban on granting status to Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza married to Israeli citizens and residents and permit the couples to reside together in East Jerusalem and Israel
- Recognize and honor the right of Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes in 1948 and their descendants to enter Israel and reside in the areas where they or their families once lived, as Human Rights Watch has outlined in a separate policy, which also outlines the options of integration in place or in the OPT and resettlement elsewhere.
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The Nation State Law (Article 2, 26)
The Israeli Knesset in 2018 passed the “Basic Law: Israel—The Nation State of the Jewish People,” (‘Nation State Law’), a law with constitutional status that affirms the inferior legal status of Palestinian citizens, who make up around 19 percent of Israel’s population,
The law does not articulate the right of self-determination for other people, nor declare it a priority to build homes for non-Jews, much less include language about equality. A Knesset legal advisor said he sought to include “mention of the issue of equality and the issue of the state belonging to all citizens, [but] the committee chose not to make this into a law.”
In July 2021, the Israeli Supreme Court upheld the Nation State Law.
By enshrining as a constitutional value the inferior legal status of non-Jews, the law denies non-Jews equal protection under the law in contravention of Articles 2 and 26 of the ICCPR.
The Human Rights Committee should call upon the Government of Israel to:
• Repeal provisions in the “Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People” that discriminate between Jews and non-Jews
https://www.btselem.org/statistics/detainees_and_prisoners (accessed June 4, 2020); Addameer, “On Administrative Detention,” July 2017, http://www.addameer.org/israeli_military_judicial_system/administrative_detention (accessed June 4, 2020).