If there were a case that could illustrate the disagreement between Israel and the
Palestinians, the Shalit prisoner exchange deal could be the one.
Various aspects of any such exchange, and the way different issues are being
spun politically, are illustrative.
Legally, Israel
refuses to recognize the over 10,000 prisoners it is holding as being prisoners
of war. Nor does it accept that these prisoners deserve the title of "protected
individuals", to which the Geneva Convention applies. The convention regulates
how an occupying power is supposed to deal with civilians under its occupation.
Israel
does not accept that it is an occupying power.
The Fourth Geneva Convention, which was drawn up after the Nazi occupation of
much of Europe, was agreed upon specifically
to regulate the actions of a prolonged occupying power. Most international
legal experts believe it to be the most appropriate and applicable
international legal framework.
One stark violation of this agreement is in the area of the rights of
Palestinian prisoners in Israel,
who are routinely denied basic rights, including the right of family
visitations because of the inaccessibility of Israeli prisons to over 90 per
cent of Palestinians living in the occupied territories.
Only those with family members living in East Jerusalem (which was
unilaterally annexed by Israel),
or those fortunate enough to get a once in a while permit by way of the Red
Cross to visit their loved ones.
By refusing to accept the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians as
being war, Israel refuses to apply the definition of either "prisoners of war"
or "revolutionaries" to those it holds in its prisons, as the first protocol of
the Geneva convention, which was signed in 1977, would require. Legal experts
insist that Article 43 of this convention considers some Palestinian detainees
"prisoners of war".
While Palestinians consider their prisoners to be political prisoners or
liberation fighters, Israel
considers them terrorists who do not deserve the same rights and treatment it
gives to civilian inmates.
Israel and its
propagandists blast Hamas for not allowing the International Red Cross to visit
its prisoners; they also decry the fact that Israel is trading hundreds of
Palestinians for one Israeli. Palestinians say that Israel regularly arrests as many
Palestinians as it wants every day, holding many without trial or charge. They
also point out the lopsided number of Palestinians killed in Gaza (over 1,000), compared to the about 10
Israelis that were killed (some from friendly fire) in that conflict.
If press reports about the refusal of Israel
to release prisoners from East Jerusalem are correct, this will reflect one
more area in which the Israelis expect the world to respect their unilateral
decision to consider East Jerusalem part of
the occupied territory.
Furthermore, and according to international law, once occupation ends, the
occupying power is obliged to release prisoners because it is illegal to
transfer prisoners (Article 76) from the occupied areas to the occupying
country.
Israel
refused to do that after the signing of the Oslo Accords, when it withdrew from
all major Palestinian cities; neither did it do so after the Israeli army left
Gaza Strip. In both cases, Israel
illegally transferred prisoners held in the occupied territories to prisons
inside Israel.
Ironically, when the Israeli army regrouped its military forces on the
international borders with Gaza, the Israeli government asked the world to
consider the occupation of Gaza ended, without agreeing to release Gazan
prisoners, keeping them, instead, in Israeli jails.
Politically, a prisoner exchange leaves many questions unanswered. Both Israel and Hamas refuse to recognize each other,
yet they have both found it convenient to negotiate via a third party (Germany and Egypt).
Therefore, the prisoner exchange reflects the absurdity of Israel's policy
which will reward Hamas while the latter refused to honor the commitments of
the roadmap, which call, among other things, to a freeze of settlement
activities in the occupied territories (which are also in violation of the same
Geneva Conventions).
Palestinians complain that Israel
rewards Hamas while denying the moderates the same treatment. They point out that
repeated requests from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to end settlement
activities in areas earmarked for the internationally accepted lands for a
Palestinian state are rejected.
Also denied has been the repeated Abbas request for the release Marwan
Barghouthi, a well-known, rather moderate, Fateh leader.
Palestinians are looking for the day when all prisoners are released, not in
an exchange that is forced on Israel
but rather as a result of making the wrong right, ending the occupation and
allowing for an independent Palestinians state alongside a safe and secure Israel.
Posted
at
27 Nov 2009 4:31 AM
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