MIFTAH
Thursday, 26 September. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The Fourth Geneva Convention for the Protection of Civilians enjoins the occupying power to provide for the well being of the "protected persons" under its control for the duration of the occupation. Furthermore, the Convention states unambiguously in Article 49: "Individuals or mass forcible transfers, as well as deportations of protected persons from occupied territories to the territory of the Occupying Power or to that of any other country, occupied or not, are prohibited, regardless of their motive." Article 76 adds that "protected persons accused of offences shall be detained in the occupied country and, if convicted, they shall serve their sentence therein."

Although Israel has signed the Fourth Geneva Convention, the government denies that it applies to the West Bank and Gaza Strip. On the contrary, Israel enforces article 112 of the 1945 Emergency (Defense) Regulations, which was promulgated by the British mandatory government. According to Article 112, which permits deportation: "The High Commissioner shall have the power to make an order …for the deportation of any person from Palestine. A person in respect of whom a Deportation Order has been made shall remain out of Palestine so long as the order remains in force." However, prior to the end of the mandate in 1948, the British revoked the Emergency Regulations.

Israel has used its expulsion policy as a political tool, in order to prevent an indigenous Palestinian leadership from arising. For Palestinians, deportations seem an integral part of the Israeli effort to systematically wipe out the Palestinian Arab leadership in the occupied territories. Exile physically eliminates the leaders who can rally the citizens to resist the occupation and deters the growth of an alternative, natural and open political leadership that could express their political rights and aspirations. Moreover, expulsion satisfies the Israeli public's demand for vengeance.

Prior to 1980, the Israeli army transported deportees to the borders of either Jordan or Lebanon before the deportees' could contact a lawyer to obtain a stop order from the Israeli High Commission of Justice. Since 1980, deportees have had 48 hours to appeal to a military review committee and then to the High Court. The appeals committee consisted of a military judge and army officers who lacked independent status, since they were appointed by the military government. Those committees rarely challenged deportation orders. In practice, security officers insisted that evidence be hidden from deportees and their defense lawyers; charges were hardly ever stated. In any event, the committees did not constitute formal courts of law and only had advisory power. According to records, only 6 people appealed successfully to the military committee. Nonetheless, three of the six were deported anyway, when the Israeli government overruled the committee. Such steps postponed expulsion, but scarcely blocked it.

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