![]() | >>> VERSION FRANÇAISE | ||
![]() | Inter-Parliamentary Union | ||
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Resolution adopted unanimously by the IPU Governing Council at its 187th session The Governing Council of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Referring to the case of the above-mentioned parliamentarians, all of whom were elected to the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) in January 2006, as outlined in the report of the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians (CL/187/12(b)-R.1), and to the resolution adopted at its 186th session (April 2010), Referring also to the study produced by the Israeli non-governmental organization Yesh Din (Volunteers for Human Rights) on the implementation of due process rights in Israeli military courts in the West Bank, entitled “Backyard Proceedings”, which reveals the absence of due process rights in those courts, and to the study published in September 2006 by B’Tselem (the Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories) and entitled “Barred from Contact: Violation of the Right to Visit Palestinians Held in Israeli Prisons”, Recalling the following: the parliamentarians concerned are part of a group of initially more than 30 PLC members who had been elected in January 2006 on the Change and Reform Party list (Hamas) and were arrested following the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, on 25 June 2006, prosecuted and found guilty of membership of a terrorist organization (Hamas), of holding a seat in parliament on behalf of that organization, of providing services to it by sitting on parliamentary committees, and of supporting an illegal organization; most of them were released after serving their sentences; four of them, Ayman Daraghme (PAL/51), Nizar Ramadan (PAL/52), Azzam Salhab (PAL/53) and Khaled Tafish (PAL/54), were rearrested in March 2009 and taken into administrative detention after negotiations for the release of the Israeli soldier failed; Khaled Tafish has since been released, Considering that Anwar Zboun (PAL/22) was released on 25 April 2010, Mohammed Abu Teir (PAL/28) on 20 May 2010, Mohammed Totah (PAL/30) on 1 June 2010, and Nayef Al-Rojoub (PAL/17) on 20 June 2010, Considering further the following: Mr. Motlak Abu-Jheasheh was among the parliamentarians arrested on 29 June 2006 in the context of Gilad Shalit’s kidnapping; his case was closed upon his release on 2 September 2009; Mr. Abu-Jheasheh was held in administrative detention and was not prosecuted; on 20 August 2010, the Secretariat was informed by a qualified source that the Israeli authorities had refused his request for a permit allowing him to travel to Mecca to perform the hajj/pilgrimage in November 2010; that decision was forwarded to him in Hebrew and no reason was provided for the refusal; the source stresses that no criminal proceedings are pending against Mr. Abu-Jheasheh, Recalling the following: Mr. Abu Teir, Mr. Totah and Mr. Attoun were elected in the electoral district of East-Jerusalem where they live and were born; on 28 May 2006 the then Israeli Minister of the Interior revoked their Jerusalem residency permit arguing that they had shown disloyalty to Israel by holding seats in the PLC; an appeal against that decision was lodged with the Supreme Court and the deportation order was not implemented owing to their arrest on 26 June 2006, so that the deportation was de facto suspended until their release in 2010, Considering the following: upon their release they were immediately notified that they had to leave East Jerusalem; Abu-Teir was ordered to leave by 19 June 2010 and, refusing to do so, he was arrested; the other two parliamentarians were ordered to leave by 3 July 2010 and, likewise refusing to comply with the order, they took refuge in the ICRC building in Jerusalem; a motion for injunction to the Supreme Court seeking to halt the deportation was rejected, the Chief Justice ruling that there was no point in issuing the requested injunction because “this is not an irreversible measure”; on 6 September 2010, the Supreme Court heard their petition against the revocation of their residency permit and deportation order; the Court decided to give the petitioners a 30-day period in which to reiterate their request to the Interior Minister for a re-examination of their residency status, a 30-day period for the Minister to respond, and a further 10 days for the petitioners to react to the Minister’s reply; it adjourned the case without setting a new date for hearing, Noting the following arguments put forward by the defence lawyers:
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