5759
B’Tselem publishes report at end of Oslo interim period:
Oslo: Before and After - The Status of Human Rights in the Occupied
Territories
In its new report, B'Tselem compares the status of human rights before
the Oslo Accords - from the beginning of the intifada until the signing
of the Declaration of Principles on 13 September 1993 - with the period
from the signing of the Declaration of Principles to the end of the
interim period - 4 May 1999. In its comparison, B'Tselem notes, subject
by subject, whether human rights violations have deteriorated or
improved, and discusses policy changes that have taken place.
Since the report deals with human rights violations against residents of
the Occupied Territories, it covers violations committed by both Israel
and the Palestinian Authority. The PA, which systematically violates the
human rights of Palestinians, is itself a product of the Oslo Accords.
The violations described in the report occur despite the explicit
commitment of the parties in the Oslo Accords to act to respect
international norms and procedures regarding human rights.
The principal findings of the report are as follows:
- Human rights violations by Israel decreased in certain areas and
increased in others.
- Despite the decrease in some violations, Israel's relevant policies
did not change. Thus, for example, the Open-Fire Regulations, which
enable lethal gunfire against persons who do not constitute a
life-threatening danger, continue to apply; torture during
interrogations continues; and prolonged administrative detention still
occurs.
- In the following areas, there has been a quantitative decrease in
Israel's human rights violations. This decrease results from the
redeployment of Israeli security forces from Palestinian population
centers, and the decrease in direct contact with Palestinians in the
Occupied Territories:
- persons killed or injured
- persons detained and imprisoned
- persons administratively detained
-
house demolitions as a means of punishment
- TORTURE - The number of Palestinians tortured during interrogation has
decreased. However, this decrease is a result of fewer Palestinians
being interrogated by Israel. The percentage of interrogated
Palestinians whom Israel tortures has not decreased.
- WATER - The Interim Agreement improves the water situation of
Palestinians, providing them with more water and some influence over the
distribution arrangements. At the same time, however, the Interim
Agreement perpetuates the pre-existing inequality, and gives Israel veto
power over any change in the status quo.
- DEPORTATION - Since the mass deportation of 415 Palestinians in
December 1992, Israel has not deported Palestinians from the Occupied
Territories.
- FAMILY REUNIFICATION - In August 1993, a month before the signing of
the Declaration of Principles, Israel began to approve family
unification requests of two thousand Palestinian families a year.
Previously, Israel had rarely approved such requests. Despite the
transfer of authority over the population registry to the PA, in 1995,
Israel continues to apply the same quota, which does not meet the
Palestinians' needs, and to determine which families will be allowed to
live together in the Occupied Territories.
In the following areas, there has been a deterioration in human
rights
- FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT - Since 1993, Israel has imposed a permanent
closure on the Occupied Territories. The closure is the broadest
violation of the human rights of Palestinians in the Occupied
Territories, affecting almost every person in many areas of their daily
life.
In the Oslo Accords, Israel undertook to establish a safe passage
between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. This undertaking resulted from
the parties recognition of the two areas as comprising "one territorial
unit." Israel has not fulfilled its commitment, causing harm to the
Palestinian economy, to relations between relatives who are unable to
meet, and to Gazan students wanting to study at West Bank universities.
- ADMINISTRATIVE HOUSE DEMOLITIONS - Although the Oslo Accords left Israel
with power over planning and building over only some five percent of the
West Bank's population, there has been no reduction in the number of
houses Israel demolishes each year because they were built without a
permit.
- JERUSALEM RESIDENCY RIGHTS - Beginning in 1995, Israel initiated a
policy of mass revocation of the residency and social rights of East
Jerusalem Palestinians.
Areas in which Israel's policy remained the same
-
SETTLEMENTS - The Oslo Accords did not relate to Jewish settlements
during the interim period, and enabled continuation of Israeli policies
of land expropriation, house demolition to build bypass roads,
application of two different systems of law, and discrimination between
settlers and Palestinians living in the Occupied Territories. Since
1993, Israel has established thirty new settlements in the Occupied
Territories. Seventeen of these were established just prior to and after
the signing of the Wye Memorandum.
-
HOUSING IN EAST JERUSALEM - Regarding planning and building in East
Jerusalem, the Interim Agreement stipulated that the issue of Jerusalem
would be discussed in the context of the permanent-status arrangements.
The Oslo Accords led to no change in Israeli policy on East Jerusalem.
As a result, its policy of intentional and systematic discrimination in
planning, building, and demolition of houses built without a permit
continues.
As for human rights violations by the Palestinian Authority, since
its establishment in May 1994, the PA has systematically violated the
rights of residents under its control. Its principal violations are the
following:
- Imposition of capital punishment
- Mass, arbitrary detentions
- Imprisonment without trial
- Torture
- Denial of the right to due process and a public trial
- Censorship
It was hoped that the peace process between the two parties would lead
to an improvement in human rights in the Occupied Territories. While
there have been improvements in certain spheres, no systematic
improvement has taken place. In certain areas, the human rights
situation has even deteriorated.
B'Tselem: The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the
Occupied Territories - is the leading Israeli organization monitoring,
documenting and advocating to improve human rights in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip. Founded in 1989, B'Tselem publishes reports, engages
in advocacy and serves as a resource center. Visit their web site at www.btselem.org
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