Israel’s government votes 93-0 to back death penalty law for alleged Gaza terrorists
Israel’s parliament has voted to livestream special tribunals able to impose the death penalty on Gazan Palestinians for allegedly participating in "crimes against humanity”, using a legal framework last used to execute Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in 1962.
The Knesset voted 93-0 out of 120 parliamentarians for the new tribunals in the latest part of a legislative package that mandates capital punishment for Palestinians but not Israelis.
On March 30, the Knesset passed legislation requiring all Palestinians convicted of murdering Israelis in nationalist acts or terror to be hanged. This applies to ethnic Palestinians who have Israeli passports and all residents of the West Bank but not to ethnic Jews in either region.
open image in galleryAt least 1,000 Gazans are currently held in administrative detention as ‘unlawful combatants” in Israel.
Many more have been imprisoned on the West Bank where there has been a surge in Jewish settler violence, including killings of Palestinians this year. They will be tried in military courts where the conviction rate is over 90 per cent, according to Israeli human rights groups.
The Gaza law will establish special tribunals to try people alleged to have taken part in the mass murder of about 1,200 people, many of them civilians, on October 7 2023 in the worst atrocity committed against Israelis since the nation was founded.
The hearing will be televised, as they were in the Eichmann trial. The Nazi was convicted of Holocaust crimes.
The only prisoner to have been executed following court proceedings was Israeli soldier Meir Tobianski who was shot in 1948 and later exonerated. Since 1962, Israel has not used the death penalty but has killed hundreds in extrajudicial so-called “targeted killings” in the Middle East and further abroad over many years of hit-squad operations by its intelligence services.
Diana Buttu, a Palestinian citizen of Israel and a human rights lawyer, said that the shift in Israeli national perception that has led to the support for the death penalty among left wing politicians had followed the October 7 atrocities, led by Hamas.
Israel has accepted that its forces killed at 70,000 people in its campaign against Gaza after the October attacks. Human rights groups, and the United Nations, have said that the majority, at least 47,000 were women and children.
open image in galleryBenjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has been indicted for alleged war crimes at the International Criminal Court in the Hague as a result of what the UN’s experts has said was a campaign of genocide in the enclave.
“This is part of a package of legislation that has meant the Israelis can now register land on the West Bank as theirs only, whoever owns it, execute Palestinians who resist, and claim that their efforts to get rid of Palestinians completely is all legal,” said Ms Buttu.
The imposition of the death penalty on alleged Palestinian terrorists has been criticised by the UK government which expressed “deep concern” describing, it along with Australia, France, Germany, Italy, and New Zealand, as "de facto discriminatory" and warning that it could undermine Israel's democratic principles.
The Gaza legislation is likely to be met with similar statements but there have been no sanctions threatened against Israel which now has a legal mandate in its own legal system to kill people who come from one ethnic group only.
The laws also come amid further efforts to ensure that the Palestinians are never able to establish a state alongside Israel, with a bill that proposes to abolish the Oslo accords which started the failed peace process and were signed by Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader in 1993 alongside Yizyah Rabin, the Israeli Prime Minister then. Both men were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Rabin was later assassinated by an Israeli Jewish terrorist from the now banned Kahan movement. But the heir to its political agenda are now in Netanyahu‘s coalition government.
open image in galleryThe move to abolish peace agreements with the Palestinians, is being led by Limor Sonn Har Melech, deputy speaker of the Israeli parliament and member of the Jewish Power Party.
It is opposed to all and any accommodation with the Palestinian people. Its members want to see Israel rule from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.
Hamas advocates the use of violence to rid the region of Israel as a Jewish State, also using the slogan of “freedom” for Palestinians “from the river to the sea”.
Har Melech said that the purpose of the Oslo bill would be to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state and allow for wider Jewish settlement on the occupied West Bank.
All Israeli settlements are illegal under international law.
open image in galleryWhen the Palestine Liberation Organization, led by Arafat, recognized the state of Israel in 1993 and, along with Rabin, agreed to work towards peace and a state for both peoples, there were about 110,000 Israeli settlers on the West Bank.
Now there are about 530,000. There are an additional 200,000 in East Jerusalem which, like the West Bank, was captured by Israel in 1967.
The Palestinian population of the West Bank is now governed by the Palestinian Authority which is responsible for zones known as “area C”, mostly urban areas.
It is dominated by Fatah party which is currently having elections ahead of wider polls in the PA. Ironically participants in both have to agree to respect the Oslo accords as a condition of taking part in elections.
Husam Zomlot, the Palestinian ambassador to London, has decried what he calls Israeli efforts to “collapse the PA” and has called for mass non-violent protest against the continued Israeli occupation.
open image in gallerySpeaking to the World of Trouble podcast he said:” We need to make sure that we find a way that is not war. But that has to be coupled with an international campaign similar to that of South Africa, to suck oxygen out of the settlements, out of the occupation... We cannot do it alone.
“Fatah understands that the first thing we need to do is the unity of our people and making sure our people remain on our land.
“Now, the effective mode is nonviolent resistance, but we have to redefine resistance. It's important. Resistance is not just armed resistance.”
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