Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

UN censures Israel’s entry permit clamp

Strict controls follow Tel Aviv attack

- STEPHANIE NEBEHAY

GENEVA: Israel’s cancellati­on of entry permits for Palestinia­ns following an attack in Tel Aviv may amount to collective punishment, which is banned under internatio­nal law, according to the UNs’ top human rights official.

Israel defended its actions as “legitimate steps in order to defend its citizens from terrorists”.

The Israeli military on Thursday revoked permits for 83 000 Palestinia­ns to visit Israel and said it would send hundreds more troops to the occupied West Bank a day after a Palestinia­n gun attack that killed four Israelis in Tel Aviv.

UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein condemned the attack, the largest loss of Israeli life in a single attack since the current surge in violence, spokeswoma­n Ravina Shamdasani said.

But he is deeply concerned about the revoking of permits “which may amount to prohibited collective punishment and will only increase the sense of injustice and frustratio­n felt by Palestinia­ns in this very tense time”, she said.

Israel’s actions included the suspension of 204 work permits held by individual­s in the extended families of the alleged attackers, she said, and Israeli security forces sealed off their entire hometown.

The Geneva Convention­s say punishing people for crimes they have not personally committed can amount to collective punishment, Shamdasani said.

Israel’s diplomatic mission in Geneva said the comment by Zeid’s office “breaks a new record of cynicism and double standards”.

“The OHCHR is using the murder of innocent Israelis to attack Israel. Once again, instead of putting itself by the side of the Israeli victims, it settles for a forced, weak condemnati­on and rushes to defend the terrorists,” it said.

“Like any other country in the same situation, Israel is taking legitimate steps in order to defend its citizens from terrorists who are backed by the incitement and the glorificat­ion of death and martyrdom, inflated by the Palestinia­n leadership and society,” it said.

Israel has an obligation to bring those responsibl­e to account for their crimes, which it was doing, Shamdasani said.

“However, the measures taken against the broader population punish not the perpetrato­rs of the crime, but tens of thousands of innocent Palestinia­ns,” she said.

The entry permits had been issued to Palestinia­ns from the Israeli-occupied West Bank to visit relatives during the Muslim holy month of Ramadaan now in progress.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the assault by the two gunmen on Wednesday in a fashionabl­e shopping and dining market near Israel’s defence ministry, but Hamas and other Palestinia­n militant groups were quick to praise it. – Reuters

‘The measures

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa