ISRAEL/OPT: PALESTINIAN LIVES IN PERIL AS ISRAEL REINFORCES APARTHEID
February 2,
2023
https://www.amnestyusa.org/press-releases/israel-opt-palestinian-lives-in-peril-apartheid/
Israeli authorities must dismantle the system of
apartheid which is causing so much suffering and bloodshed, Amnesty
International said today. Since the organization launched a major campaign against
apartheid one year ago, Israeli forces have killed almost 220 Palestinians,
including 35 in January 2023 alone. Unlawful killings help maintain Israel’s
apartheid system and constitute crimes against humanity, as do other serious
and ongoing violations by Israeli authorities such as administrative detention
and forcible transfer.
Over the past few days, a series of deadly attacks have
underscored the urgent need for accountability. On 26 January, Israeli forces
carried out a raid on the Jenin refugee camp and killed 10 Palestinians, including
a 61-year-old woman. On 27 January, seven Israeli civilians were killed when a
Palestinian gunman opened fire in Neve Ya’akov, an Israeli settlement in
occupied East Jerusalem. In response to this attack, Israeli authorities have
stepped up collective punishment against Palestinians, carrying out sweeping
mass arrests and threatening punitive home demolitions.
“The devastating events of the past week have exposed
yet again the deadly cost of the system of apartheid. The international
community’s failure to hold Israeli authorities to account for apartheid and
other crimes has given them free rein to segregate, control and oppress
Palestinians on a daily basis, and helps perpetuate deadly violence. Apartheid
is a crime against humanity, and it is frankly chilling to see the perpetrators
evade justice year after year,” said Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s
Secretary General.
“Israel has long attempted to silence findings of
apartheid with targeted smear campaigns, and the international community allows
itself to be cowed by these tactics. Until apartheid is dismantled there is no
hope of protecting civilian lives, and no hope of justice for grieving families
in Palestine and Israel.”
Under apartheid, Israeli authorities control virtually
every aspect of Palestinians’ lives and subject them to daily oppression and
discrimination through territorial fragmentation and legal segregation.
Palestinians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) are segregated into
separate enclaves, with those living in the Gaza Strip isolated from the rest
of the world through Israel’s illegal blockade, which has caused a humanitarian
crisis and is a form of collective punishment.
Daily evidence of apartheid
On 1 February 2022, Amnesty International released
a report setting
out how Israel enforces an institutionalized system of oppression and
domination against Palestinians wherever it has control over their rights: in
Israel, the OPT, and against displaced refugees by denying their right to
return. It showed how Israeli laws, policies, and practices are enacted with the
overarching aim of maintaining a Jewish demographic majority and maximizing
control of land and resources to benefit Jewish Israelis to the detriment of
Palestinians.
2022 went on to become one of the deadliest years for
Palestinians in the occupied West Bank since at least 2005, with some 153
Palestinians, including dozens of children, killed by Israeli forces, mostly in
the context of increased military raids and arrest operations. Research by
Amnesty International found that 33 Palestinians,
including 17 civilians, were killed by Israeli forces during their August 2022
offensive on Gaza, and that at least seven civilians were killed by rockets
launched by Palestinian armed groups.
Meanwhile, incidents of Israeli settler violence
against Palestinians increased for
the sixth consecutive year in 2022, with attacks including physical assaults,
damage to property, and destruction of olive groves. There is extensive
documentation of the Israeli authorities condoning and facilitating this
violence, including by arresting the Palestinians who are under attack,
providing armed escort to settlers, or simply looking on from the sidelines
while Palestinians are beaten and their property destroyed. his culture
of impunity has encouraged further violence, as demonstrated by the spate of
attacks by settlers which have taken place in recent days.
Following the Neve Ya’akov shooting attack, Israeli
authorities have appeared to incite further violence against Palestinians by
announcing plans to expedite gun licenses “in order to enable thousands of
additional citizens to carry weapons”. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who
has already pledged to massively expand illegal settlements across the OPT,
also said the government was planning to “strengthen
settlements”.
All Israeli settlements in the OPT are illegal under
international law, and Israel’s long-running policy of settling civilians in
occupied territory amounts to a war crime.
Increased settlement expansion will put countless more
Palestinians at risk of forcible transfer – a crime against humanity which
Israeli authorities have committed on a systematic basis. A recent example is
the May 2022 Supreme Court ruling which greenlighted the forcible transfer of
more than 1,150 Palestinians from Masafer Yatta in the West Bank. In the past
year, Israeli authorities also scaled up plans to demolish the unrecognized
village of Ras Jrabah in Israel’s Negev/Naqab region and displace its 500
Palestinian-Bedouin residents, while in January 2023 the Bedouin village of
Al-Araqib was demolished for the 212th time. Amnesty International’s apartheid
report showed how forced evictions in the Negev/Naqab, and across the OPT, are
carried out in pursuit of Israel’s demographic objectives.
Growing recognition
Amid these violations, there is growing international
recognition that Israeli authorities are committing apartheid. Palestinians
have long been calling for an understanding of Israel’s rule as apartheid, and
Palestinian organizations such as Al-Haq, the Palestinian Center for Human
Rights, and Al Mezan have been at the forefront of UN advocacy to this end.
The push for such recognition gained momentum in 2022
with two UN Special Rapporteurs concluding that Israeli authorities are
committing apartheid. The number of states at the Human Rights Council
referring to apartheid by Israel doubled from nine in 2021 to 18 in 2022.
Notably, South Africa and Namibia are among the states who have expressed
concern that Israel’s treatment of Palestinians constitutes apartheid. Several
international and Israeli human rights organizations have also called for an
end to apartheid, including Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem, and Yesh
Din.
Israeli authorities have gone to great lengths to
suppress and discredit the findings of apartheid. The consequences are particularly
serious for Palestinian human rights defenders – in August last year, Israeli
authorities raided the offices of seven leading Palestinian NGOs after branding
them “terrorist entities” and outlawing them. In December, Salah Hammouri, a
field researcher at the prisoners’ rights organization Addameer, was stripped of
his Jerusalem residency and deported to France after spending nine months in
Israeli administrative detention.
Disregard for international law
In May 2023, Israel’s human rights record will come
under scrutiny through the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the UN Human
Rights Council. Amnesty International has written to the Israeli authorities
urging them to engage, but they have yet to submit to the review process.
Israeli authorities have ignored most of the recommendations put forward by
reviewing states and endorsed by the Human Rights Council during the previous
UPR cycle in 2018. For example, despite being urged repeatedly over the years,
and then again in 2018, to end administrative detention, Israel is currently holding
over 860 Palestinians without charge or trial – the highest number in 15
years.
“The Israeli authorities’ longstanding disregard for
their obligations under international law and the recommendations of the
international community continues to have dire consequences for Palestinians
and undermines rights protection for Israelis as well,” said Agnès Callamard.
“No state should be able to systematically flout
international law, including binding UN Security Council resolutions, with
impunity. We call on states to end all forms of support for Israel’s
violations, and to break with years of complicit inaction by holding the
Israeli authorities to account.”
Contact: media@aiusa.org
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