Palestinian Prisoners Denied the Right to Education
The right of children and youth to education, including those who are imprisoned, is enshrined in inter- national human
rights law, specifically Article 26 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 94 of the 1949 Fourth
Geneva Convention.
However, since the beginning of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967, prisoners and detainees’
right to education has been severely constricted, if not prohibited altogether. That includes children and youth, of
whom the Israeli military arrests 700 annually. Although its regulations not only recognise the right of prisoners to
pursue their education but also require it to provide the necessary books and the opportunity to study or take exams,
this basic human right has been undermined at every opportunity. The goal, concludes Addameer (a prisoner and human
rights support association), is to “un-educate” Palestinians -- especially those aged 16-18 who “constitute the pillar
of community development.”
International Law and the Importance of Education:
“We cannot imprison a person for many years without providing an avenue for change... Indeed change will have occurred
but certainly not how it was envisioned. For we will have created an envious, frustrated, delusional, pent-up, angry and
dehumanized individual who will certainly seek revenge.” – A prisoner interviewed for the UN’s Special Rapporteur Report
on the Right to Education
According to the April 2009 report of the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on the Right to Education, Vernor Muñoz:
“Learning in prison through educational programmes is generally considered to have an impact on recidivism,
reintegration and, more specifically, employment outcomes upon release.
Education is, however, much more than a tool for change; it is an imperative in its own right. Yet, prisoners face
significant educational challenges owin
g to a range of environmental, social, organisational and individual factors.”
Prisoners’ right to education is guaranteed in international law. In addition to Article 26 of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and Article 94 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, the Basic Principles for the Treatment of Prisoners – a
resolution adopted by the UN in 1990 – states that people in prisons retain the human rights and fundamental freedoms
set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including the “right to take part in cultural activities and
education aimed at the full development of the human personality.”
For children in particular, the right to education is widely considered a fundamental right. Thus, in territories under
foreign military occupation, the occupying power is obliged to protect and respect the right to education, as noted in
the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). A “child” is defined as anyone less than 18 years of
age.
Israel’s Track Record:
Israeli juvenile offenders are allowed to complete formal education from grade 8 to 12. For example, in the Ofek
facility for Israeli juvenile offenders, there is a school with 19 classrooms in which no more than 10 students study at
a time. The children there have the opportunity to follow a curriculum specially designed for them by the Israeli
Ministry of Education, which includes four hours of class a day combined with educational workshops and work. Similarly,
they have access to 33 teachers employed by the Israel Association of Community Centres on a permanent basis. At the end
of a 12-week trimester, prisoners take exams and their grades are then certified by the Israeli Ministry of Education.
In contrast, since the beginning of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967, the Israeli government
has deprived Palestinian prisoners and detainees of their right to education. Children are penalised as well as adults,
in part due to the fact that the military orders state that any Palestinian aged 16 and above is considered an adult.
All Palestinian children between the ages of 16 to 18 are detained together with adult Palestinian detainees, and thus
are often deprived of the opportunity to continue their education.
In 1997, a coalition of prisoner advocates submitted a petition to the Tel Aviv Central Court demand- ing that
Palestinians’ right to education be upheld just as for Israeli juvenile offenders. Although the court ruled that
Palestinian prisoners are entitled to the same rights to education as Israelis, it also stated that the right to
education was contingent on “security requirements.” Thus, the impact in practice has been minimal.
For example, although Palestinian prisoners can receive books via the ICRC and their families during visits, such visits
are frequently banned. In addition, restrictions are imposed on the kinds and number of books they are allowed to
receive. They can get newspapers in Arabic, such as Alquds, free of charge, but other newspapers, in Hebrew or English,
are distributed only to those with a subscription. Plus, the newspapers are always distributed after a delay and are not
up to date.
Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons are allowed to study only at the Open University of Israel. They may not
continue their studies at any institution they studied at prior to their arrest, even if the university approves. A
years-long struggle to change this practice has been unsuccessful. The IPS claims that prisoners are barred from
participating in study programs of Arab universities for security reasons. Many prisoners are unable to register at
Israeli universities because of financial and language restrictions. In addition, detainees being held at military
detention centres, as opposed to prisons, are prohibited from registering at any university. Prisoners who are held in
isolation are also not al- lowed to study even at the Open University of Israel.
The list of forbidden specialisations includes natural science, medicine, computer science, physics, chemistry and any
program that requires the use of other supplies besides text books.
Even at times of exams, teachers are prohibited from entering prisons to formally instruct inmates. Similarly, prisoners
are prohibited from communicating with Palestinian teachers and schools through other means such as phones, letters or
visits.
Recently, exams themselves have been prohibited. For example, in 2011, more than 300 Palestinian prisoners were excluded
for the third consecutive year from taking their secondary school exams – required to graduate and go to college.
According to the Palestinian Prisoners Centre, Israeli personnel at the jails also seized books and academic papers
delivered to prisoners through the Inter- national Red Cross, and announced that prisoners would be prohibited from
applying to Arab and Palestinian universities. In protest, the prisoners declared a hunger strike.
In 2009, when secondary exams were first prohibited, the Palestinian Authority’s Minister of Prisoners and Ex-Detainees,
Issa Qaraqi, appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court of Justice to reverse the decision. However, the court postponed the
hearing on the suit, and it has not been discussed since.
The most recent decision to ban the exams came in the wake of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s declaration
that Israel had the right to reduce the “advantages” granted to Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. It was
reportedly an attempt to pressure the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip to free Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was
captured by Palestinian militants in a raid on an Israeli army border position in 2006.
There have some exceptions to this gloomy picture. In March 2010, imprisoned Fatah official Marwan Barghouti managed to
complete his doctorate in political science. The University of Cairo and the Arab Academy for Research had accepted
Barghouti in 1999 - three years before he was arrested by Israel. Barghouti’s success in earning his degree even when in
prison was due primarily to “personal efforts and study in secret,” according to Qaraqi. In 2009, another former
prisoner, Khaled Al-Azraq, explained how he and his comrades were able to pursue their education in secret:
“Members of the prisoners’ movement came up with ingenious ways of smuggling books into Israeli prisons, methods that
Israeli prison guards were never able to discover. The movement systematically organised workshops, seminars, and
courses held inside the prison to educate prisoners’ on every relevant topic one can imagine. Every day, the prisoner
holding the position of ‘librarian’ would pass through the different cells and sections, and prisoners would exchange
the book they had just finished for the one they were about to begin. The librarian carried the ‘library book, a record
of the books available in the library, and a list of the books each prisoner had requested.
“Talking about this reminds me of one of the most memorable prison library moments. We had found out that the movement
had managed to smuggle Ghassan Kanafani’s Men in the Sun into the old Nablus prison. We all raced to get our names on
the list of people wanting to read the book, and the wait lasted weeks! Several times, we resorted to making copies of
sought-after books like this. Of course, copies were done with pen and paper, and I remember copying Naji Aloush’s The
Palestinian National Movement of which we made five hand- written copies.”
Addameer states: “Arguably some form of education, however informal or unstructured it might be, is more beneficial to
the mental health of a detainee than no education at all. At the same time, such an arrangement does not absolve Israel
from its obligations under international law, whereby educa- tion should be made available for all juvenile detainees.”
Case Studies:
Telmond Prison (near Netanya, Israel):
There are three types of Palestinian juvenile political detainees at Telmond: youth who are illegally imprisoned with
juvenile Israelis confined for criminal reasons, those who were detained before the 1997 court decision that upheld
their right to education (at least on paper), and a new section for detainees imprisoned after that court decision. The
first group is treated in the same way as Israeli criminal detainees; they receive education in Hebrew (a language they
typically do not understand), using the Israeli curricula. The second group is taught using a curriculum that includes
only three out of the eight subjects required by the Palestinian Ministry of Education. The third group receives no
education whatsoever. Thus, it is evident that the 1997 court decision that was supposed to ensure education for
detained Palestinian children has been completely ignored.
Megiddo Prison, near Haifa:
Palestinian children who are 16 or older at the time of their sentencing are detained in Megiddo Prison. Because Israeli
Military Order No. 132 defines any Palestinian 16 and over as an adult, the Military Authority that runs Megiddo Prison
refuses to recognise the educational needs of children detained there. The only form of education available is ad-hoc
study groups where adult prisoners teach juvenile detainees. The attorney for Defence of Children International also
reports that the prison administration severely restricts the movement of books into the prison.
After Effects:
It is difficult for child prisoners to return to school following release from prison. This is due to a variety of
factors, including the trauma of detention, the differences in age between ex-prisoners and other school children, and
the inadequate or non-existent educational services provided by the prison administrations, which results in
ex-prisoners falling behind in the educational process. Thus, youth are denied both childhood because of life in prison,
and a decent future, because of the difficulties in acclimating once released.
References:
- The Right to Education of Palestinian Prisoners. Addameer Prisioner Support and Human Rights As- sociation. December
2008.
- The systematic and institutionalized ill-treatment and torture of Palestinian children by Israeli au- thorities.
Defense for Chidren International-Palestine Section. June 2009. http://www.dci-pal.org/
english/pub/research/CPReport.pdf.
- Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Civil, Political, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Including the
Right to Development: The right to education of persons in detention. Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Right to
Education Vernor Muñoz. April 2009.
- Palestinian Prisoners: Special Topic. Occupied Palestine: Blogging 4 Human Rights and Liberation of Palestine. Oct.
10, 2010.
http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/special-topics/prisoners/
- In Prison and Denied Education, by Mohammed Omer. Palestine Chronicle. Aug. 11, 2011. http://
palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17036
- The Prison as University: The Palestinian Prisoners’ Movement and National Education, by Khaled Al-Azraq.
www.badil.org. Autumn 2009.
- Israel deprives Palestinian prisoners of education. Bernama, July 25, 2011. http://my.news.yahoo.
com/israel-deprives-palestinian-prisoners-education-115151047.html
- Israeli Prison Education: Learning the Lessons of Institutionalized Racism (fact sheet). Defense for Children
International-Palestine Section.
Published by: UFree Network | Media Centre
UFree Network | An independent European-wide human rights network, set up to defend the rights of Palestinian political
prisoners and detainees:
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