The Jewish Chronicle

Law on immigrant detention quashed by Israeli High Court

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER

IN A rare and unanimous landmark ruling, an expanded panel of Israeli High Court judges voted to strike down a Knesset law that enabled the police and the Interior Ministry to detain illegal immigrants for up to three years without trial.

In their ruling on a petition served by Israeli human-rights organisati­ons, the nine judges decided that the law was unconstitu­tional, infringed on the immigrants’ right to freedom and was in breach of Israel’s Basic Law of Human Dignity and Freedom.

Only in a handful cases in Israel’s legal history has the High Court ruled to strike down a law passed by the Knesset.

This ruling is particular­ly significan­t because the current president of the Supreme Court, Asher Grunis, who was sworn in a year and a half ago, is considered a non-interventi­onist and has opposed such rulings in the past.

Judge Grunis wrote in the decision that the Knesset has 90 days in which to pass a new amendment to the law and that any detention period must be “significan­tly shorter”.

The High Court’s ruling was celebrated by the groups supporting migrants’ rights.

Amnesty Israel tweeted immediatel­y afterwards that “this is a wonderful day for human rights in Israel”.

Politician­s on the right were less enthused. Ayelet Shaked of the Jewish Home party called the ruling “undemocrat­ic” and accused the judges of interferin­g in the work of the Knesset. Likud’s Miri Regev, meanwhile, said that the ruling “is detached from the reality in South Tel Aviv”, referring to the neighbourh­oods around Tel Aviv’s central bus station where tens of thousands of African migrants live and work without visas or permits.

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 ?? PHOTO: FLASH 90 ?? Grunis: historic decision
PHOTO: FLASH 90 Grunis: historic decision

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