When All Families are Potential Terrorists: Israel Extends Law Banning Family Reunification
All Palestinians support the resistance against Israel’s illegal military occupation. All Palestinians are therefore potential terrorists says the state of Israel. Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip who marry Palestinians inside Israel are therefore banned from living together in Israel.
On 18 July 2004, the Israeli government voted in favor of a six-month extension to the “Nationality and Entry into Israel Law (Temporary Order) – 2003.” In accordance with Article 5 of the law, the Israeli Knesset must approve an extension of the law. The Knesset did so on 21 July by a majority vote of 60 to 29.
The law prohibits the granting of any residency or
citizenship status to Palestinians from the occupied territories
who are married to Israeli citizens, thereby banning family
reunification. The law was enacted by the Knesset, as a temporary
order for one year on 31 July 2003, and affects thousands of
families, comprised of tens of thousands of individuals.
Seven petitions have been submitted and are currently pending
before Israel’s Supreme Count against the law. The Court has joined
these petitions for hearings and decision. The Court rejected the
petitioner’s request for an injunction to freeze the implementation
of the law while the case is pending. The Court, however, has
issued an order nisi and injunctions preventing the deportation of
three of the petitioners pending a final ruling on the
petition.
The UN Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination has called (Decision 1[63]) on Israel to revoke the
law. The Committee reiterated this request (Decision 2[65]) at its
65th Session in August 2004. The Committee also reminded
Israel that it had failed to submit a report on compliance with the
Convention for the 65th Session, despite the fact that
the 10th, 11th, 12th, and
13th periodic reports from 1998 to 2004 were overdue.
The Committee requested Israel to file a report no later than 31
December 2004.
Based on reports by Adalah –
the Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel. For ongoing
information visit the Adal
ah website: www.adalah.org.
|
UN Special Rapporteur
Calls for Legal Actions Against Destruction of Palestinian
Property, Disengagement from Gaza will Not End Israel’s
Occupation
Excerpts
from the 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,12 August
2004
According to UNRWA's records, from the beginning of the second
intifada to 30 June 2004, a total of 2,272 shelters
accommodating 4,072 families (21,453 persons) had been completely
demolished or damaged beyond repair in the Gaza Strip during
Israeli military activities. Of them, 1886 shelters accommodated
3338 refugee families (17,831 persons). Out of this group, 2,771
families (15,198 persons) were identified as being eligible for
assistance under the Agency’s re-housing scheme. Of those already
identified as eligible, 2,094 families (11,231 persons) are
refugees residing in Rafah.
Following a recent visit to the 1967 occupied Palestinian
territories, UN Special Rapporteur John Dugard called for legal
action against persons responsible for the massive demolition of
Palestinian homes.
“The
Special Rapporteur visited Block "O", the Brazil Quarter and the
Tel Es Sultan neighbourhood of Rafah in the wake of Operation
Rainbow carried out by the IDF in May 2004 and met with families
that had been rendered homeless in the exercise. In Operation
Rainbow, 43 persons were killed, including 8 who were killed in a
peaceful demonstration on 19 May. From 18 to 24 May, a total of 167
buildings were destroyed or rendered uninhabitable. These buildings
housed 379 families (2,066 individuals). These demolitions occurred
during one of the worst months in Rafah's recent history. During
May, 298 buildings, housing 710 families (3,800 individuals), were
demolished in Rafah. Since the start of the intifada in September
2000, 1,497 buildings have been demolished in Rafah, affecting over
15,000 people. The Special Rapporteur was appalled at the evidence
of wanton destruction inflicted upon Rafah. The Special Rapporteur
is mindful of article 53 of the Fourth Geneva Convention which
provides that any destruction by the occupying Power of personal
property is prohibited except when such destruction is rendered
absolutely necessary by military operations and that failure to
comply with this prohibition constitutes a grave breach in terms of
article 147 of the Fourth Geneva Convention requiring prosecution
of the offenders. The time has come for the international
community to identify those responsible for this savage destruction
of property and to take the necessary legal action against
them.” [Emphasis added]
Dugard also commented on Israel’s claim that disengagement from the
Gaza Strip will end Israel’s 37 year occupation.
“Israel sees the political advantages in withdrawing from Gaza. In
particular, it claims that it would no longer be categorized as an
occupying Power in the territory subject to the Fourth Geneva
Convention. In reality, however, Israel does not plan to relinquish
its grasp on the Gaza Strip. It plans to maintain its authority by
controlling Gaza's borders, territorial sea and airspace. That
Israel intends to retain ultimate control over Gaza is clear from
the Israeli disengagement plan of April 2004. This disengagement
plan states in respect of Gaza, inter alia, that "The State
of Israel will supervise and maintain the external land envelope,
have exclusive control of the air space of Gaza and continue to
carry out military activity in the Gaza Strip's maritime space. ...
The State of Israel will continue to maintain a military presence
along the border line between the Gaza Strip and Egypt (the
Philadelphi route). This presence is a vital security need. In
certain places a physical broadening of the area in which this
military activity is carried out may be required." Another means of
control that is being contemplated is the installation of high-tech
listening devices in major buildings in the Gaza Strip in order to
enable the Israeli authorities to monitor communications. This
means that Israel will remain an occupying Power under
international law. The test for application of the legal regime of
occupation is not whether the occupying Power fails to exercise
effective control over the territory, but whether it has the
ability to exercise such power, a principle confirmed by the United
States Military Tribunal in In re List and others (The
Hostages Case) of 1948. It is essential that the international
community take cognizance of the nature of Israel's proposed
withdrawal and of its continuing obligations under the Fourth
Geneva Convention.”
Report of the Special
Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights on the situation of
human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel
since 1967, UN Doc. A/59/256, 12 August 2004.
|