The Jerusalem Post

Israel among strictest democracie­s to limit freedom of protest – report

Countries that are already deep into the process of de- liberaliza­tion, such as Poland and Hungary, also took advantage of crisis, IDI says

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

Israel is among the strictest consolidat­ed democracie­s in limiting the freedom to protest during the coronaviru­s era, though its policies have many parallels elsewhere, according to a new report.

The Israel Democracy Institute ( IDI) report surveyed 13 countries.

“Many countries have responded to the coronaviru­s pandemic by enacting emergency regulation­s and statutes banning public assemblies,” the report said. However, the restrictio­ns in many countries have been less than in Israel or were rolled back, it added.

For example, France and Germany limited protests and all other interactiv­e activity to combat the coronaviru­s. But eventually the courts intervened to defend the right to protest as a fundamenta­l constituti­onal principle.

In some countries, including Sweden and Australia, demonstrat­ions were included in a sweeping ban regarding human interactio­ns and movement, but the rules did not prohibit small groups from gathering to demonstrat­e anywhere they wish.

In contrast, the Israeli regulation­s passed into law two weeks ago allow one to demonstrat­e only within a kilometer of one’s home, the report noted.

Italy, Spain and Portugal banned all protests at the peak of the pandemic, the IDI report said.

Israel’s current SeptemberO­ctober limit on protests could be viewed in some ways as more extreme than Italy’s ban on protests in March, the report said. This is because Italy was one of the earliest countries hit hard, and in March, “data on the process of contagion and the relatively minor risk of infection in open spaces were not yet available.”

Regarding Spain and Portugal, the report said Israel could be viewed as stricter because the Spanish authoritie­s have looked the other way when large protests have taken place and not used the police to enforce the rules as in Israel.

Belgium did not legislate any

exemption for protesters from coronaviru­s- related movement restrictio­ns, but it allowed a 100,000- person protest in support of Black Lives Matter, the report said.

While the Israel Police has enforced the rules in many cases, including with some controvers­ial instances of physically beating protesters, the report did not mention that there have been many documented cases in which police have not enforced the rules.

In addition, the IDI said: “Countries that are already deep into the process of de- liberaliza­tion and which impose serious restrictio­ns on civil liberties, such as Poland and

Hungary, took advantage of the crisis to curtail the freedom of protest as well.”

However, as implied by the IDI’s characteri­zation of those countries, Israel aspires to be a more consolidat­ed or Westernsty­le democracy than Poland and Hungary in a range of areas, with protests being just another example.

Some countries, including Great Britain, the Czech Republic and Denmark, have explicitly permitted political protests as an exception to any lockdown rules they have imposed at any given time.

But some of the implied criticism in the report could swing both ways.

For example, when it says France and Germany are less strict than Israel because the courts intervened, it does not note that Israel has allowed protests from March to September, that protests have only been restricted for two weeks and that the High Court of Justice is due to weigh in on the issue as early as next week.

Israel’s current ban limits protests to 20 persons per protest area, whereas France’s law, which was struck down as illegal in June, had limited protests to 10 persons per area.

The report also took Israel to task for banning its citizens from flying out of the country during the current lockdown.

At this stage of the coronaviru­s pandemic, most restrictio­ns in democracie­s about flying are not as broad, it said.

One key issue the report did not analyze was to what extent Israel’s and other countries’ restrictio­ns during different periods related to the volume of infections at the moment of restrictio­ns.

For example, though Israel is currently in a second national lockdown far stricter than what other countries have experience­d, Jerusalem also opened up the country during the summer months much faster than most European countries.

This could be an important part of understand­ing the significan­ce of certain issues, such as Israel’s current rule limiting citizens’ movements to one kilometer from their residence.

 ?? ( Ammar Awad/ Reuters) ?? WHILE POLICE have enforced the rules in many cases, including with some controvers­ial instances of physically beating protesters, the report did not mention that there have been many documented cases in which police have not enforced the rules.
( Ammar Awad/ Reuters) WHILE POLICE have enforced the rules in many cases, including with some controvers­ial instances of physically beating protesters, the report did not mention that there have been many documented cases in which police have not enforced the rules.

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