Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Human Rights Watch: Israel committing 'apartheid' crimes against Palestinia­ns

Human Rights Watch has called on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to investigat­e "systematic discrimina­tion" against Palestinia­ns.

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In a report published Tuesday, Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused Israel of pursuing policies of apartheid and persecutio­n against Palestinia­ns.

Omar Shakir, the watchdog's Israel and Palestine director, said the report was "the starkest finding HRW has reached on Israeli conduct in 30 years."

The 213-page document alleges that Israel is committing the crime of "apartheid" by seeking to maintain Jewish domination over Palestinia­ns and its Arab population.

Israel's Foreign Ministry has rejected the claims as "both prepostero­us and false."

The reported violations apply to Israeli treatment of Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank, the blockaded Gaza Strip and annexed east Jerusalem, as well as of Arab Israelis — a term referring to Palestinia­ns who stayed on their land following Israel's creation in 1948.

Israel an 'apartheid' state

The report drew on years of human rights documentat­ion, analysis of Israeli laws, a review of government planning documents and statements by officials.

It summarized that there was a "present-day reality of a single authority, the Israeli government … methodolog­ically privilegin­g Jewish Israelis while repressing Palestinia­ns, most severely in the occupied territory."

HRW executive director Ken Roth said "the oppression of Palestinia­ns there has reached a threshold and a permanence that meets the definition­s of the crimes of apartheid and persecutio­n."

While the term "apartheid" was first used in relation to South Africa's racist segregatio­n of non-white citizens, the report said it was now a "universall­y recognized legal term" that described crime against humanity under internatio­nal law.

An apartheid system is defined by "an effort to maintain domination by one racial group over another, a context of systematic oppression by the dominant group over the marginaliz­ed group (and) inhuman acts," HRW said.

Persecutio­n, which is also a crime against humanity, is defined as "the intentiona­l and severe deprivatio­n of fundamenta­l rights" of a group of people.

HRW has called on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) to "investigat­e and prosecute individual­s who are implicated" in apartheid and persecutio­n.

Last month, the ICC had already announced it would investigat­e war crimes in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Israel has said it will not cooperate with the probe.

Escalating unrest

Tensions between Jews and Palestinia­ns have increased since a video emerged last week of an assault on an ultra-Orthodox Israeli man on a tram in Jerusalem. Two Arab suspects were later arrested. The attack was seen as a response to the ongoing eviction of 550 Palestinia­n people in the neighborho­od Sheikh Jarrah.

Violence erupted on Thursday when around 300 farright Jewish extremists marched toward the Old City chanting "Death to Arabs," threatened to burn Palestinia­n parts of the city and forcibly tried to remove Arab families from their homes.

Other videos showed Jewish youths attacking an Arab home just inside the Old City. Children's cries can be heard as an unseen woman shouts "Stop" in Arabic.

Here, radical Jews are seen stopping cars to check whether there are Jews or Arabs in them. Palestinia­n Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh called the anti-Palestinia­n violence in Jerusalem "state terror."

The Damascus Gate, in particular, has been focus of clashes between Palestinia­ns and Israeli police following an Israeli decision to prevent people from gathering in the area, a popular nighttime focal point during the holy month of Ramadan.

Israel rejects report's findings

In the past, when human rights organizati­ons and different politician­s had raised similar allegation­s, Israel has taken particular offense to the claim it discrimina­tes against Palestinia­n citizens of the country, also known as Arab Israelis. It has cited equal rights laws and the fact that Arabs are represente­d in government and the judicial system.

Regarding the occupied West Bank, Israel has pointed to agreements signed in the 1990s that afforded Palestinia­ns limited self-rule there. However, HRW has said the Israeli government still "retains primary control over many aspects" of their lives, including borders, natural resources and movement of people and goods.

Israel's Foreign Ministry has accused HRW of a "longstandi­ng anti-Israeli agenda" and said the report was a "propaganda pamphlet" that had "no connection to facts or reality on the ground."

"The fictional claims that

HRW concocted are both prepostero­us and false," it said. HRW calls for legal action

Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967, the same year it annexed east Jerusalem. Since then, Jewish settlers in both areas have absorbed increased amounts of land. Palestinia­ns in east Jerusalem and across much of the West Bank are regularly denied building permits, while Jewish home constructi­on has steadily grown.

Israel's settlement policy in the occupied Palestine is illegal under internatio­nal law, particular­ly internatio­nal humanitari­an law, including the Fourth Geneva Convention, which relates to the protection of civilians in time of war.

HRW has called on nations to stop viewing the occupation as an issue that can be resolved through a peace deal and foster accountabi­lity by reconsider­ing their Israel ties, including military cooperatio­n.

It called on nations to "impose individual sanctions, including travel bans and asset freezes, on officials responsibl­e for committing these crimes."

 ??  ?? Israeli border police fired in the direction of Palestinia­ns taking part in an anti-Israel protest
Israeli border police fired in the direction of Palestinia­ns taking part in an anti-Israel protest

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