Israeli Military Order
An Israeli Military Order is a general order issued by an Israeli military commander, and applying to occupied territory. It has the force of law, without any democratic control or preceding parliamental approval. Enforcement is subjected to military courts instead of civil courts.
The Military Orders system is still a basic instrument to rule the Palestinian population in the West Bank, in contrast to the Israeli colonists, who are usually subjected to civil courts. Military Orders immediately become law for all Palestinians living in the area.[1] They were issued "in a constant stream" between 1967 and 1994,[2] covering criminal and civil matters as well as security and military matters.
History
Israel inherited the British-imposed 1945 Defence (Emergency) Regulations, applying to whole historic Palestine. The Regulations included, inter alia, the establishment of military tribunals to try civilians without granting the right of appeal, allowing sweeping searches and seizures, prohibiting publication of books and newspapers,[3] demolishing houses, detaining individuals administratively for an indefinite period, sealing off particular territories, and imposing curfew.[4]
In 1948, the newly formed state of Israel incorporated the Defense (Emergency) Regulations into its national laws, except for "changes resulting from establishment of the State or its authorities.
Although, in 1951, the Knesset decided that the Defense Regulations oppose the basic principles of democracy and directed the Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee to draft a bill for their repeal, they were not abolished. Later prospects for partial repeal were gone upon the outbreak of the 1967 Six-Day War. The military governor in the Occupied Territories issued a military order "freezing" the legal situation then existing there. Since, the Regulations and its system of military orders are extensively used in the Occupied Territories.[4]
Examples of Military Orders
Officially beginning in 1967, the Israeli Military Orders are issued by the General Commanders and carried out by the Israeli Defense Forces and ultimately affect the infrastructure, law, and administration[5] particularly of the Palestinians of the region. Pursuant to Military Orders, the military is authorized to issue declarations holding more detailed orders; see for example Declaration s/2/03.
General Orders to consolidate the occupation
- Military Order No. 1650 (2009): Order regarding Prevention of Infiltration (Amendment No. 2). This law modifies the definition of "infiltrator" in Military Order No. 329, and allows the IDF to arrest and imprison for seven years if the person "infiltrated" unlawful and for three years if lawful, but without a permit. An "infiltrator" is any person present in the West Bank without the appropriate permit, even if born in the West Bank or lawfully moved to it, for instance from Gaza or from abroad before a permit was required. Deportation of an "infiltrator" is considered an arrest. This broadened definition will allow thousands of Palestinians to be deported without a trial and without judicial review. Opposition to this law was voiced by the South African government (comparing it to pass laws of their apartheid), Richard Falk of the United Nations, The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network, as well as Amnesty International.[6][7][8]
- Military Order No. 329 (1969): Order Regarding Prevention of Infiltration. Defined "infiltrators" as “a person who entered the Area knowingly and unlawfully after having been present (on) the east bank of the Jordan, Syria, Egypt or Lebanon following the effective date”. The main purpose of the order was to prevent Palestinian refugees from returning to their homes, as well as Palestinian armed groups from entering the territory.[6] See Israeli military order 1650 above.
- Military Order No. 947 (1981): This order created the Israeli Civil Administration in the West Bank. The head of the Civil Administration is appointed by the Commander of the IDF. It grants the Head of the Civil Administration the authority to draw up subsidiary legislation.[9] Its purpose, as stated in Section 2 of the Order, is to “administer the civilian affairs in the region in accordance with the directives of this Order, for the well-being and good of the population, and in order to supply and implement the public services and taking into consideration the need to maintain an orderly administration and public order in the region”.[10] All powers held by this Head of the Civilian Administration are ones delegated to him by the Area Commander, who can take away or grant power at their discretion. Although the chosen leader of the Civilian administration is someone of unspecified nationality, the headquarters is situated at Beit El, a restricted zone to which only Palestinians summoned or able to schedule an appointment could enter.
- Military Order No. 1 (1967): Declares the Gaza Strip and West Bank closed military areas.[11] A similar order was issued on 14 June 1967 for the occupied Golan Heights.[12]
Land
- Declaration s/2/03 (2003): This declaration confiscates Palestinian lands on the Israeli side of the West Bank barrier and declares the Seam area a "Closed Zone" for Palestinians. Only Palestinians who live near the seam zone (which is part of the Occupied Territories) are allowed to enter through a single specific gate and stay, provided that they possess a personal written permit, usually for a limited period. The Declaration does not apply to Israelis and Jews in the rest of the world.[13]
- Military Order 811 and 847: allows Jews to purchase land from unwilling Palestinian sellers by using a “power of attorney.”
- Military Order 58: makes land transactions immune to review so long as the transaction was carried out by an Israeli “acting in good faith.”
- Military Order 58, Article 5: says any land transaction will not be voided even if it is proved the transaction was invalid.
- Military Order 25: forbids public inspection of land transactions.
Water
- Military Orders No. 92 and 158: The combination of these two orders gives the Israeli authorities complete control over the entire water supplies in the West Bank and Gaza. Only the Head, appointed by the Area Commander, has influence in any issue regarding “transportation, extraction, export, consumption, sale, distribution, inspection of its use, purification, allotment of shares, the establishment of water projects, measurement, prevention of contamination, carrying out of studies and measurements in anything that deals with water matters, drilling wells, hearing of objections and all proceedings dealing with any of the above laws, etc., fixing and collecting fees, taxes and any payments for any of the above and any other matter which has not been mentioned specifically above which deals in any way whatsoever with water subjects.” For example, Article 4(A) of Order 158 specifically states that “it shall not be permissible for any person to set up or to assemble or to possess or to operate a water installation unless he has obtained a license from the Area Commander.”.[14] And although the exact number of granted licenses is disputed, the percentage is relatively small.
Agriculture
- Military Order No. 1051 (1983): This order establishes an agricultural fund, to be financed by the Civil Administration. This fund will compensate for any excessive agricultural product, its uses, as well as any extra money needed to organize the marketing of that product. The money will come from the issuance of a new tax.[15]
- Military Order No. 1015 (1982): Concerning Monitoring the Planting of Fruitful Trees. Permissions for planting trees; impose fees for permissions. Permits expire in one year or each June 15.[16]
- Military Order No. 818: establishes how Palestinians can plant decorative flowers.
- Military Order No. 474: This order, an amendment to a Jordanian law requiring a certain amount of plants and trees to be maintained, states that the Area Commander can appoint inspectors to the specified areas, who may evict any violators of the law as well as take them to a police station.
- Military Order No. 134: This order makes a certificate/permit from the Area Commander necessary in order to move a tractor from Israel into the West Bank as well as to operate a tractor or any other form of agricultural machinery. This offense is punishable with imprisonment, a fine, or both.[17]
- Military Order No. 2 Concerning Quarantine (7 June 1967): This order prohibited the transport of any plant or animal to outside the West Bank. This offense is punishable with three years of imprisonment.[18]
Protests, gathering and political activities
- Military Order No. 101 (1967): Denies many basic freedoms that are required under the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights. For example it prohibits a gathering of more than 10 people unless the Israeli military receives advance notice with names of all participants, and enables some other activities (e.g. waving a flag or political symbol except by permission) that would generally be considered to be peaceful to become offenses carrying prison terms and fines.[19][6]
- Military Order No. 537 (): Removes democratically elected Mayors of West Bank cities from their position.
Freedom of movement
- Military Order No. 418: This order served to abolish all local participation in the operations of local road planning. Previously, as laid out by the Jordanian planning law, various local institutions, such as the Engineers’ Union, would take part in a hierarchical structure and participate in the national planning committee. Instead, all planning was to be done by a military committee called the Higher Planning Committee, which was empowered to suspend any other plans or municipalities’ licenses and to exempt any person from the need to obtain a planning license.
- Military Order No. 96: This order simply forbids the purchase of goods on a donkey.
Criminal Code and Military Court
- Military Order No. 1651 (2009): Replaces 20 military orders issued between 1967 and 2005, including Military Order 378, which established the creation of Israeli military courts in occupied territory. Provides the basis for arrest and detention, including administrative detention to detain Palestinians without charge or trial for prolonged periods, by the Israeli army and defines charges under military law. Redefines categories of age to make possible higher penalties for children.[6] Under this order "throwing stones at people or property can carry a ten-year jail sentence."[20]
- Military Order No. 271: This order makes a certificate from the Area Commander necessary that affirms that any damage caused by an operation of the Israeli military or anyone working for the army was carried out “because of security needs.” Once obtained, the case can be heard by the Objections Committee.
- Military Order No. 172: This order established the military Objections Committee, which began as a tribunal to hear appeals initially regarding property rights, but has expanded greatly since. Now, for example, the Committee will hear appeals against the decisions of the military government, as well as any matters regarding expropriation of land, “Absentee property,” natural resources, unregistered land, violations of Order No. 818 (regarding decorative flowers)
- Military Order No. 164: This order requires permission to be granted for certain witnesses to appear and testify in court. However, this does not apply to any hearings before the Objections Committee (see Order No. 172).
- Military Order No. 56: This order serves to ensure that all objections submitted concerning the traffic authority’s decisions to cancel, suspend, or refuse to renew licenses will be reviewed by the Objections Committee, which is to be made up of three military officers.
Import and export
- Military Order 1252 (1988): Concerning Merchandise Transport. This order sets the standard for moving any sort of goods across the lines of the West Bank. In order to transport any sort of “merchandise,” one must present their permit, which can be personal or general. As for punishment, one cannot be fined then tried in court, yet they can be tried, and then fined if deemed necessary.
Other Military Orders
- Military Order 107: bans publications including works on Arabic grammar, histories of the Crusades, and works on Arab nationalism.
- Military Order No. 50: This Order strictly limits the people of the West Bank’s informative sources, as it “prohibits either the bringing to the area of any ‘newspaper’ or its ‘publication’ without a permit from the officer appointed by the Area Commander for the purposes of this Order.” The above definition of publication is used to include and prohibit all forms of publication, regardless of its origin, language, or the quantity it is in.
- Military Order No. 854: This Order was established to control the matriculation of the West Bank’s academic institutions. Under No. 854, the military has total control over who may enter a university as a student, teacher, or administrator. All students must have obtained an identity card distributed by the Area Commander before enrollment.
- Military Order No. 514: This order allows the Area Commander to appoint members of the committee, whose decisions are appealable to the Objections Committee, whose decisions serve as recommendations to the Area Commander, for situations regarding the Jordanian Pensions Law.
- Military Order No. 348: This order establishes a special department in the West Bank that will make final decisions regarding property in the West Bank, as the ultimate authority.
- Military Order 998: requires Palestinians to get Israeli military permission to make a withdrawal from their bank account.
- Military Order 93 and amendment: gives all Palestinian insurance businesses to the Israeli Insurance Syndicate.
- Military Order 128: gives the Israeli military the right to take over any Palestinian business which does not open during regular business hours.
- Military Order 847: declares only Israeli notaries can authenticate signatures.
Application of the Hague Regulations
In accordance to Article 43 of the Hague Regulations, ratified at the Hague Conventions, Israel acted to implement a vast number of new laws, intending to ensure ‘public order’ (translated from French) in the lands of Israel and Palestine. In reference to “Military Authority Over the Territory of the Hostile State,” Article 43 of the Hague Regulations states, “The authority of the legitimate power having in fact passed into the hands of the occupant, the latter shall take all the measures in his power to restore, and ensure, as far as possible, public order and safety, while respecting, unless absolutely prevented, the laws in force in the country”[21][22] The interpretation and application of this Article was initially analyzed by the Israeli Supreme Court.
Initial Applications of the Hague Regulations
One of the first applications of Article 43, which was deemed valid by the Israeli Supreme Court was the case of the Jerusalem District Electricity Company. The Court concluded that it was the military’s responsibility to address the economic welfare of the local population (in Jerusalem), and therefore should help meet the local demand for electricity for the Palestinians and Jewish settlers, specifically in the settlement of Kiryat Arba alike. However, the Supreme Court also validated the military’s prohibition of the “Al-Talia,” an Arab-centric weekly newspaper.
More significantly, the Supreme Court ruled that the military commander had the right to impose a “value tax”[23][24] needed to obtain resources in order to fulfill the ‘public order and safety’ clause of Article 43. Much to the petitioners’ dismay, the law remained valid. Finally, the Supreme Court ruled in approval of the military’s confiscation of petitioners’ land, in order to build roads ultimately connecting the West Bank with Israel. The Court saw this as ensuring public order and growth. These cases all served to establish the role of the Hague Regulations, specifically that of Article 43, to be played in the context of Israel’s occupancy of the former Palestine.
Fourth Geneva Convention
Since the arrival of the Hague Regulations in 1907, Israel used their Supreme Court’s interpretation of the principles of Article 43 for decisions regarding their occupied areas. Then in 1951, Israel ratified the fourth installment of the Geneva agreements, the Fourth Geneva Convention which defines humanitarian protections for civilians in a war zone, and outlaws the practice of total war. However, after their ratification, Israel concluded that the agreements could not be applied to the territories they were occupying as they particularly had issues with Article 2Article 2, stating: “In addition to the provisions which shall be implemented in peace-time, the present Convention shall apply to all cases of declared war or of any other armed conflict which may arise between two or more of the High Contracting Parties, even if the state of war is not recognized by one of them.”[25] However, Israel later announced that they had decided to act in accordance with the humanitarian provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
International reactions
Israeli policy has been widely examined by many organizations across the world. Several investigations, including ones done by Amnesty International, The Sunday Times of London, the United Nations Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting Human Rights of the Population of the Occupied Territories, al-Haq, and the Israeli International Center for Peace in the Middle East have cited human rights violations with respect to Israel’s policy of deportation, collective punishments, detention without trial, house arrest, torture, arbitrary lethal shootings, and the restrictions placed upon the people’s freedom of speech, press, association, and assembly[26] (cite Dugard, p 461 of International Law). However, relatively few measures have been taken to reprimand Israel. In 1982, as part of its Uniting for Peace Resolution, the UN called upon states to terminate economic, military and diplomatic ties with Israel; however, these resolutions were perceived as recommendatory and yielded little effect.[27]
See also
- Martial law#Israel
References
- ↑ Gordon, 2008 p. 27
- ↑ Brown 2003, p. 47
- ↑ Ben-Zvi, Abraham (December 2005). "The Limits of Israel’s Democracy in the Shadow of Security". Taiwan Journal of Democracy 1 (2): 6. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Defense (Emergency) Regulations. B'Tselem. Accessed January 2014
- ↑ Playfair, Emma (1992). International Law and the Administration of Occupied Territories. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Israeli military orders relevant to the arrest, detention and prosecution of Palestinians. Addameer. Accessed January 2014
- ↑ PCHR Condemn New Israeli Military Orders Aimed at Expelling West Bank Palestinians. PCHR, 12 April 2010
- ↑ Order No. 1650—Order regarding Prevention of Infiltration (Amendment No. 2) (unofficial translation). HaMoked. Accessed January 2014
- ↑ Israel Military Order No. 947 Concerning theEstablishment of a Civilian Administration. Israel Law Resource Center
- ↑ Shehadeh, Raja (1985). Occupier's Law, Israel and the West Bank. Washington DC: Institute for Palestine Studies. p. 70.
- ↑ Note 10 annex The Israeli Policy of Closure. PCHR, 20 December 1996
- ↑ NGO report to the UN. AL-MARSAD - The Arab Centre for Human Rights in the Golan Heights. 25 January 2007
- ↑ PLO-NAD, Israeli Military Order Declaring West Bank Land Between Israel's 1967 Border and the Wall as a ″Closed Zone″. Accessed January 2014
- ↑ Shehadeh, Raja (1985). Occupier's Law, Israel and the West Bank. Washington DC: Institute for Palestine Studies. p. 153.
- ↑ Israel Military Order No. 1051 Concerning the Marketing of Agricultural Products. Israel Law Resource Center
- ↑ Israel Military Order No. 1015 Concerning Monitoring the Planting of Fruitful Trees. Israel Law Resource Center
- ↑ Drury, Richard T. and Winn, Robert C. "Plowshares and Swords: The Economics of Occupation in the West Bank". Published by Beacon Press, Boston, MA (1992)
- ↑ "Israel Military Orders". Israel Law Resource Center. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ↑ Order No. 101, full text. Order No. 101— Order Regarding Prohibition of Incitement and Hostile Propaganda Actions (27 August 1967)
- ↑ http://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21583674-release-prisoners-touches-palestinians-their-core-why-they-count Palestinian prisoners: Why they count
- ↑ "Convention (IV) respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land and its annex: Regulations concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land. The Hague, 18 October 1907.". International Humanitarian Law - Treaties & Documents. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ↑ http://www.icrc.org/ihl.nsf/WebART/195-200053?OpenDocument
- ↑ Qupty, Mazen (1992). International Law and the Administration of Occupied Territory. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 91.
- ↑ The Application of International Law in the Occupied Territories as Reflected in the Judgments of the High Court of Justice in Israel
- ↑ "Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War. Geneva, 12 August 1949.". Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ↑ Dugard, John (1992). International Law and the Administration of Occupied Territories. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 461.
- ↑ Dugard, John (1992). International Law and the Administration of Occupied Territories. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 462.
Further reading
- Gordon, Neve Israel's occupation (University of California Press, 2008).
- Brown, Nathan (2003) Palestinian politics after the Oslo accords
- J Rabah, N Fairweather (1993)Israeli military orders in the occupied Palestinian West Bank, 1967-1992. Jerusalem Media & Communication
- Arnon, A (2007) Israeli Policy towards the Occupied Palestinian Territories: The Economic Dimension, 1967-2007. MIDDLE EAST JOURNAL[ econ.bgu.ac.il]
- Drury, Richard T. and Winn, Robert C. "Plowshares and Swords: The Economics of Occupation in the West Bank". Published by Beacon Press, Boston, MA (1992)
External links
- Israeli Military Orders. Israel Law Resource Center
- ARIJ Israeli Military Orders Database
- A Look at Israeli Military Orders
- Israeli military orders relevant to the arrest, detention and prosecution of Palestinians. Addameer