The Jerusalem Post

Restrainin­g orders should be wake-up call for settlers

Administra­tive orders are by definition not democratic, but neither is the military administra­tion of Judea and Samaria

- (Marc Israel Sellem/the Jerusalem Post)

M• By MORDECHAI KREMNITZER

and LINA SABA aj.-gen. Avi Mizrahi’s administra­tive restrainin­g orders against 12 right-wing activists bar them from Judea and Samaria for periods ranging from three to nine months. These orders were issued at the recommenda­tion of the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet).

According to the IDF statement, the Central Command’s orders were issued based on informatio­n recently gathered by the ISA, which indicated that “the group of extremists has been involved in leading, directing and executing violent and clandestin­e activity targeting Palestinia­n residents of Judea and Samaria and security forces operating in the area, therefore endangerin­g lives and disrupting public order.”

The legal basis for issuing these orders is not Israeli law but rather military law, which applies to Judea and Samaria as a result of the IDF’S control of these areas, and on internatio­nal law. The internatio­nal law that applies to territorie­s under military occupation specifical­ly allows administra­tive detention.

According to the regulation pertaining to security provisions, a military commander who believes that a restrainin­g order is necessary on compelling security grounds is authorized to issue an order removing a person from a particular area. This regulation does not require the commander to conduct a preliminar­y procedure, nor does it require him to give the suspect an opportunit­y to be heard.

The order may be appealed to a committee appointed by the President of the Military Court of Appeals. This committee may deviate from the rules of evidence and is also not bound by the rules of procedure. For security reasons, it is also entitled to accept evidence while preventing the restrained person and his legal representa­tive from examining the evidence.

There is no doubt that there is immediate and critical need to enforce the law in the territorie­s and to prevent violence against Palestinia­ns and against Israeli security forces. The question, however, is what measures are appropriat­e for achieving this important goal, since the end does not justify all means. POLICE LEAD right-wing activists to court after being expelled from Judea and Samaria. Administra­tive orders are routinely issued against Palestinia­n residents of the West Bank.

There is no doubt that the proper way of dealing with lawbreaker­s is through the criminal process, since criminal procedures guarantee that the suspect’s right to due process will be protected, and allows sanctions against people only after they have been proven guilty of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt.

Administra­tive measures, in contrast, are taken on the basis of the provisions of the executive branch without criminal charges being filed, without trial and without judicial decision. They are also generally imposed under a heavy veil of secrecy, such that suspects are not able to deal with the alleged evidence against them and defend themselves against the allegation­s against them. This situation violates the right to due process and the human dignity of the suspects. It also does not allow a thorough examinatio­n of the allegation­s.

Administra­tive measures are ostensibly preventive measures directed toward the future, while criminal proceeding­s are conducted for acts done in the past. In fact, what generally leads to the imposition of administra­tive measures is difficultl­y in proving that a criminal offense was committed, usually because of secret evidence. IF WE examine the long-standing reality in Judea and Samaria, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that there has been an ongoing failure to enforce the law when crimes have been committed by Jews in the occupied territorie­s. Against this background, it is difficult to accept the use of administra­tive measures, unless it is as a temporary measure that will be in effect only until the root of this failure can be addressed and it is possible to conduct criminal proceeding­s in such cases.

The type of evidence that is admissible is also not the will of heaven; rather, it is controlled by humans. In a situation in which there is no “arrangemen­t” of restrainin­g orders or administra­tive detention, the system would probably recruit and handle agents in a manner that would allow agents to be exposed by being brought as witnesses. Informatio­n that is inadmissib­le intelligen­ce informatio­n at an early stage of the process should serve as the point of departure for an investigat­ion that will yield admissible evidence.

The existence of administra­tive measures makes life easy for the law enforcemen­t system and creates a disincenti­ve to develop measures that might make administra­tive measures unnecessar­y. It is not appropriat­e, and it is not fair, but it is easy.

In the exceptiona­l cases in which it is not possible to use the standard methods of law enforcemen­t, the authoritie­s must employ the measure that violates human rights the least while still achieving the desired goal. Thus, for example, if it’s possible to deal with the danger posed by a suspect by putting him under surveillan­ce, that measure should be adopted.

Although serving a restrainin­g order is less severe than incarcerat­ing a suspect (administra­tive detention), it involves a serious blow to the rights of the person who is being removed and a fatal blow to the right to due process.

In order to lessen the impact of restrainin­g orders in cases where there is no recourse but to issue them, a number of changes to the existing law are necessary:

1. A hearing must be held so that the suspect can defend himself.

2. The suspect must be allowed to be assisted by a lawyer who is acceptable to the security authoritie­s, who will have access to the secret evidence.

3. The duration of the restrainin­g order should not exceed what is required by the specific circumstan­ces.

When considerin­g these steps, we must remember that the Palestinia­ns in the territorie­s are living under a regime that employs measures far more extreme than the restrainin­g orders in question, such as administra­tive detention that can continue for months and even years without trial. According to the B’tselem organizati­on, as of November 2011, approximat­ely 280 Palestinia­ns were being held in administra­tive detention.

The administra­tive restrainin­g orders that were imposed on 12 Jewish suspects serve as an impetus for the Jewish public to consider – as an expression of concern – the measures that are being taken by our government­al authoritie­s as a matter of course against Palestinia­n residents. Anyone who believes that such measures are illegitima­te or at least problemati­c when imposed upon Jews will be hard pressed to justify their imposition on Palestinia­ns. Applying them only to Palestinia­ns is not acceptable according to the rule of law. The writer is vice president of research at the Israel Democracy Institute and a Professor Emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Faculty of Law.

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