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Date: September 15, 2024 at 20:57:05
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Israel holds female Palestinian rights lawyer without trial or charge

URL: https://x.com/JeffreyStClair3


Jeffrey St. Clair, CounterPunch reposted Theia Chatelle@theiachatelle
·
1h
I believe this is what many would call "hostage taking"


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[55501]


55501


Date: September 15, 2024 at 21:08:07
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: 2023: Apartheid Israel holds over 1,200 detainees without charge

URL: https://apnews.com/article/israel-detention-jails-palestinians-west-bank-793a3b2a1ce8439d08756da8c63e5435


August 1, 2023

👆FILE - Israeli police detain a Palestinian in the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound
following a raid of the site in the Old City of Jerusalem during the Muslim holy
month of Ramadan, Wednesday, April 5, 2023. Israel is holding 1,201 detainees
— nearly all of them Palestinians —without charge or trial, the highest number in
over three decades, an Israeli human rights group said Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2023.
(AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean, File)


Israel holds over 1,200 detainees without charge. That’s the most in 3 decades,
a rights group says

BY JULIA FRANKEL

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel is holding over 1,200 detainees — nearly all of them
Palestinians — without charge or trial, the highest number in over three
decades, an Israeli human rights group said Tuesday.

The detainees, 99% of whom are Palestinians, are held under Israel’s policy of
“administrative detention,” without trial and under allegations that Israeli
authorities keep secret.

The detentions can range from a few months to years — and authorities often
extend them for unknown reasons, according to Jessica Montell, the executive
director of Hamoked, the rights group that published the figures.

Hamoked said this makes it nearly impossible for detainees or their lawyers to
mount a proper defense.

“The overall figure is outrageous,” Montell said. “This is a patently illegal
practice. These people should be given a fair trial or released.”

Israeli authorities can renew administrative detentions indefinitely. While
detention orders are usually set for periods of three or six months, Montell said
administrative detainees in Israel spend a year in detention on average.

Israel says the controversial tactic is necessary to contain dangerous militants
and avoid divulging incriminating material for security reasons. But Palestinians
and rights groups say the system denies due process and is widely abused.

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Bank
The number of administrative detainees has more than doubled since early last
year, when Israel began staging near-nightly arrest raids into Palestinian cities
and towns following a series of Palestinian attacks. A quarter of all Palestinians
under Israeli custody are now administrative detainees, according to Hamoked.

Administrative detention is very rarely used against Jews or Israelis, but that
figure has been rising, too — 14 Israelis were held in administrative detention as
of March, Montell said. Most of them are Palestinian citizens of Israel. But
several are Jews suspected of violence against Palestinians during rampages in
the West Bank.

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Neither Israel’s Shin Bet security service nor the army immediately commented
on the latest administrative detention figures.

Israel says its activities in the occupied territories are meant to stamp out
militancy and thwart future attacks. The past year and a half has seen some of
the worst bloodshed in the area in nearly two decades. More than 160
Palestinians have been killed in the fighting this year, according to a tally by The
Associated Press.

Israel says most of the dead are militants. But many were stone-throwing
youths protesting the incursions or people uninvolved in violence. At least five
of them were age 14 or younger.

Israel’s hard-line National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, a West Bank settler
himself, has pushed for tough measures against Palestinian prisoners in Israeli
jails.

On Monday, the Palestinian Prisoners Club and other advocacy groups
reported that Ben-Gvir had done away with a policy allowing the early release
for Palestinian prisoners held on national security charges.

For years, all detainees sentenced to less than four years had been eligible for
early release to relieve severe overcrowding in the country’s prisons. Israel’s
prison service confirmed that it was abiding by Ben-Gvir’s waiver of early
releases as of Tuesday.

The West Bank has been under Israeli military rule since Israel captured the
territory in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians want it to form the main part
of their future state.

The territory’s nearly 3 million Palestinian residents are subject to Israel’s
military justice system, while the nearly 500,000 Jewish settlers living
alongside them have Israeli citizenship and are subject to civilian courts.

Such disparities have fueled allegations by human rights groups that Israeli
policies toward the Palestinians amount to apartheid.


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