Ref:
63/2009
Date:
19 May 2009
Time:
11:44 GMT
Committee Against Torture’s
Findings Highlight International Community’s Inaction in the Face of
Israel’s Widespread and Systematic Violations of International Law
On 14 May, 2009, the United Nations
Committee Against Torture published its concluding observations on Israel’s
fourth periodic report. While the State of Israel was preparing its
submission, other elements of the Occupying Power’s administration were,
inter alia, reinforcing the siege on the Gaza Strip, solidifying the
annexation of occupied East Jerusalem, expanding illegal settlement
activities in the West Bank, and preparing for Operation ‘Cast Lead’, the 23
day military offensive on the Gaza Strip.
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights’ (PCHR)
investigations revealed that this offensive resulted in the deaths of 1,414
Palestinians, and the decimation of Gaza’s infrastructure. 1,181 of the dead
were non-combatants, the protected persons of international humanitarian law
(IHL). Today, four months after Israel’s declaration of a unilateral
ceasefire, the situation in the Gaza Strip remains as it was on 18 January.
Life remains in a time warp, as civilians struggle to rebuild their lives
amidst an escalating humanitarian crisis. Recovery is impossible as Israel
prevents reconstruction and continues to subject Gaza’s 1.5 million people
to an illegal siege.
The reality of life in the occupied
Palestinian territory (oPt) highlights the duplicity of the Israeli
authorities. While engaging in superficial efforts intended to appease the
international community and convey compliance with international standards,
the State of Israel continues to callously and systematically violate the
fundamental principles of IHL and international human rights law.
PCHR have documented countless human rights abuses, war crimes, and grave
breaches of the Geneva Conventions committed by Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF)
throughout the course of Operation ‘Cast Lead’. The widespread and
systematic nature of these attacks raises serious allegations that Israel
may have committed crimes against humanity. PCHR have also extensively
documented cases of torture, and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment
which form a core part of IOF policy. Such treatment includes, but is not
limited to, ‘routine’ humiliation at checkpoints, the denial of medical
treatment to patients who do not agree to collaborate with Israeli security
agencies, the use of – often lethal – violence against peaceful protests,
beatings, punitive house demolitions, which the Committee Against Torture
have confirmed amount to cruel inhuman and degrading treatment. The
prohibition of torture constitutes a jus cogens norm of international
law from which no derogation is prohibited. Both IHL and human rights law
are founded on the fundamental desire to safeguard human dignity.
Operation ‘Cast Lead’ and its consequences were witnessed throughout the
world. Yet no one is present to witness crimes committed in interrogation
centers and detention facilities. As noted by the Committee Against Torture,
investigations of security detainees are carried out ex-camera,
despite that the fact that it is these individuals who are most at risk of
torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. Local human rights
organizations and international organizations working in on prisoner’s
issues have difficulty in ensuring prompt and consistent access. Prisoners
are held in conditions which do not meet international standards, and are
used as political bargaining chips. Approximately 1,100 detainees from Gaza
have been denied family visitation rights for over 17 continuous months.
PCHR note that the crimes documented in the
Committee Against Torture’s report, and the countless other crimes committed
by IOF, cannot be carried out without impunity. This impunity is granted on
two levels: first, by the complicity of Israel’s judicial system, and
second, by the silence and deference of the international community.
It is not enough that these crimes are documented in reports and forgotten,
as happened recently following the Secretary General of the United Nations
shameful reaction to the Board of Inquiry’s report into incidents in the
Gaza Strip. If the rule of law is to be upheld, and innocent civilians
protected, then the law must be enforced.
The International Community cannot continue to allow Israel to act as a
State above the law. Perhaps the most shocking aspect of the Committee
Against Torture’s report is the fact that the majority of the
recommendations issued in its 2001 report remain outstanding. In the
intervening years, the only change has been the addition of further Israeli
violations.
PCHR affirm that if the culture of impunity
which permits the continued commission of these crimes is to be combated,
effective action on the part of the international community is required. The
EU-Israeli Association Agreement cannot be upgraded in the face of
systematic human rights abuses. Independent investigations must be conducted
so that those responsible for war crimes are held accountable.
It is Palestinian civilians who suffer the
consequences of the international community’s inaction.