Amnesty International News
6 June 2012
Israel: The injustice and secrecy surrounding administrative detention
A Palestinian woman protests against the Israeli practice of detention without trial or charge.
© ABBAS MOMANI/AFP/GettyImages
Israel must release all Palestinians held under long-standing administrative detention laws or charge and try them
promptly and fairly, Amnesty International said in a new report.
'Starved of justice: Palestinians detained without trial by Israel’ documents human rights violations associated with administrative detention – a relic of British control of the area that
permits detention without charge or trial on indefinitely renewable military orders.
The report also calls on Israel to stop using these measures to suppress the legitimate and peaceful activities of
activists in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
It urges the immediate and unconditional release prisoners of conscience held just for peacefully exercising their
rights to freedom of expression and assembly.
Administrative detainees – like many other Palestinian prisoners – have been subjected to violations such as the use of
torture and other ill-treatment during interrogation, as well as cruel and degrading treatment during their detention,
sometimes as punishment for hunger strikes or other protests.
In addition, administrative detainees and their families must live with the uncertainty of not knowing how long they
will be deprived of their liberty and the injustice of not knowing exactly why they are being detained.
Like other Palestinian prisoners, they have also faced bans on family visits, forcible transfer or deportation and
solitary confinement.
These practices contravene Israel’s obligations under international human rights law and international humanitarian law
Israel has a duty to uphold due process and fair trial rights, and to take effective action to end torture and other
ill-treatment of detainees.
Israel must also allow family visits for all Palestinian prisoners and detainees, and end forcible transfer and
deportation. And Israel is obligated to investigate violations, bring perpetrators to justice, and provide reparations
to victims.
“For decades, Amnesty International has urged Israel to end the practice of administrative detention and to release
detainees or charge them with an internationally recognizable criminal offence and try them according to international
standards,” said Ann Harrison, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa.
As of the end of April there were at least 308 Palestinian administrative detainees, among them 24 members of the
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC), including its Speaker, Aziz Dweik. Human rights defenders such as Walid Hanatsheh
and at least four journalists, in addition to university students and academic staff, were also among those behind bars.
The prolonged hunger strikes of administrative detainees such as Khader Adnan and Hana Shalabi put the issue of
administrative detention under the international spotlight earlier this year.
Their non-violent protest was followed by a mass hunger strike which began on 17 April 2012 and included an estimated
2,000 other Palestinians in Israeli prisons, many of whom are either serving prison sentences or awaiting trial.
Amnesty International’s report also documents measures taken by the Israel Prison Service (IPS) against prisoners and
detainees who went on hunger strike, with detainees describing ill-treatment by medically-trained IPS staff.
Following a deal brokered by Egypt, the mass hunger strike was suspended on 14 May 2012. However, Palestinian footballer
Mahmoud al-Sarsak from Gaza is now more than 70 days into his hunger strike which he began in March.
His protest is against his continuing detention without charge or trial for almost three years. His life is currently in
grave danger as he remains held at the IPS medical centre which cannot offer the specialized medical treatment required
by patients in such critical condition.
Under the 14 May deal, Israel agreed to end solitary confinement for 19 prisoners – held in isolation for up to 10 years
– and lift a ban on family visits for prisoners from the Gaza Strip, among other things.
“Despite many media reports suggesting that the Israeli authorities had agreed as part of the deal to release
administrative detainees at the end of their current orders ‘unless significant new information was received’, our
information is that it is business as usual when it comes to detention without charge or trial,” said Ann Harrison.
“We believe that Israel has renewed at least 30 administrative detention orders and issued at least three new ones since
this deal was struck, and family visits for Gazan prisoners have still not started.
“The authorities in Israel have a duty to protect everyone in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories from
threats to their lives and physical integrity. But they must do so in a manner that respects human rights,” said Ann
Harrison.
“Israel has used its system of administrative detention – intended as an exceptional measure against people posing an
extreme and imminent danger to security – to trample on the human rights of detainees for decades. It is a relic that
should be put out to pasture.”
Amnesty International campaigns against administrative detention throughout the world. In recent years Amnesty
International has documented abusive systems of administrative detention – and called for an end to administrative
detention – in countries including Sri Lanka, Egypt, China, and India (Jammu and Kashmir).
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