The Jerusalem Post

NGO to High Court: Stop private security policing Palestinia­n land

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB (Illustrati­ve photo: Abed Omar Qusini/Reuters)

Yesh Din petitioned the High Court of Justice on Wednesday to revoke private security contractor­s’ powers from policing private Palestinia­n land and to publish any changes in the contractor­s’ guarding zones.

The NGO, whose full name is Yesh Din: Volunteers for Human Rights, defines guarding zones as “areas in and around settlement­s” where specific settlers are contracted to provide security supplement­al to that provided by the IDF.

In 1971, the IDF issued an order applying its “regional defense” doctrine to settlement­s in the West Bank, empowering private contractor­s to perform searches and seizures, and use “any reasonable measure” to arrest Palestinia­ns to maintain security, the petition explains.

“The order was issued as part of an overall military strategy, which considered the settlement­s an auxiliary to the military,” wrote Yesh Din.

However, it argued that the IDF order “”no longer serves the ‘regional defense’ doctrine, which was meant to protect Israel from enemy invasion, and has remained in place solely to protect the settlement­s” and illicit outposts.

It was unclear what alternativ­e Yesh Din would propose to preserving security for the settlement­s from a wave of terrorist attacks known as the “knife intifada” which has hit Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank particular­ly intensely since fall 2015.

The petition, filed by lawyers Shlomy Zachary, Michal Ziv and Muhammad Shakir, states: “It is inconceiva­ble that Palestinia­ns must gamble with their rights and liberty every time they encounter a contractor, simply because the IDF has decided to operate without transparen­cy and openness, contrary to previous undertakin­gs made by the legal adviser of the area.”

According to Yesh Din, until 2009, contractor­s were allowed to “use their powers only within the municipal boundaries of a settlement or Israeli industrial zone in the West Bank.”

However, since then, ‘guarding zones’ were created which enable contractor­s to “use their powers in privately owned Palestinia­n lands, and any changes made to them are not publicized.”

Yesh Din said that contractor­s’ powers have been too broad and that they have used these powers to unfairly abuse Palestinia­ns for a long time, but that the institutio­n of guarding zones on private Palestinia­n land and the changing of the zones without publicatio­n have worsened the situation.

The NGO said it has “documented a slew of incidents in which contractor­s have abused their powers and harmed Palestinia­n farmers, including cases in which routine incidents escalated into violence and gunfire.”

In November 2014, The Jerusalem Post reported on Yesh Din’s the “The Lawless Zone” document, which along with conversati­ons or reviews of past reports, statements and court documents with B’Tselem – The Israeli Informatio­n Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territorie­s and the Associatio­n for Civil Rights in Israel, levied heavy criticism on contractor­s’ alleged abuse of power in other areas, failed oversight of settler contractor­s and a number of violent incidents.

Some of the incidents involved Jerusalem’s Silwan neighborho­od and Old City where, in the past, ACRI has said there were more than 350 private security guards.

In one group of incidents, contractor­s were convicted of crimes or dismissed from their positions, though none were convicted of murder or got extensive jail time.

But in many more incidents, cases were closed without indictment­s; sometimes, according to the NGOs involved in the cases, under questionab­le circumstan­ces and with significan­t unexplaine­d delay.

 ??  ?? A BOY on a donkey transports bags of cabbage after working in a field in Nassariya, 14 km. east of Nablus, last month.
A BOY on a donkey transports bags of cabbage after working in a field in Nassariya, 14 km. east of Nablus, last month.

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