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Last Updated: Nov 20, 2008 - 10:31:04 AM |
Hamas, which controls the Gaza strip, demanded their release as a
precondition for attending the talks which were due to take place in
Cairo under Egyptian mediation.
Last week Hamas released 80 Fatah political prisoners from Gaza's jails
and demanded the PA reciprocate.
According to human rights organisations, the bitter political rivals
continue to imprison, torture, persecute and abuse their political
opponents as the power struggle for supremacy across the Gaza Strip and
the West Bank intensifies. These are the two main Palestinian
territories.
The PA, which controls the West Bank, has recently stepped up its
sweeping arrest campaigns throughout the territory.
Human rights campaigners say the majority of Hamas detainees in the
West Bank have no relationship to the military branch of the
organisation or its fundraising activities. The majority of arrests by
both parties are politically motivated and have nothing to do with
either security or crime, they added.
"In the last two months we have noticed a large-scale campaign in the
West Bank to prosecute persons said to be from the Hamas movement,"
said Shawan Jabarin of the Ramallah-based Palestinian human rights
organisation Al-Haq.
Raji Sourani, director of the internationally respected Gaza-based
Palestinian Human Rights Centre (PHCR) said Hamas's release of
political prisoners was a step in the right direction, and urged the PA
to follow suit.
"However, we remain concerned at Hamas's control of the judiciary and
legislature which prevents an impartial judicial system. The continued
abuses by both sides also makes it that much harder for the Palestinian
factions to establish common ground politically," Sourani told IPS.
Al Haq released their latest tri-monthly Monitoring and Documentation
report at the end of September which listed the various forms of
torture and abuse applied by both sides to Palestinian detainees
belonging to opposing factions.
Jabarin said he estimated that between 20-30 percent of detainees on
both sides had been subjected to severe beatings and tied up in painful
positions.
"The use of torture and ill-treatment against detainees has clearly
become a widespread trend," the report stated. It further said that in
many cases court orders to release detainees were ignored by the
intelligence services.
In both territories, authorities frequently failed to bring detainees
before a prosecutor within the 24 hours required by law. Lawyers have
also faced difficulty accessing their clients, and authorities
frequently failed to inform detainees of the reason for their arrest.
Journalists associated with the opposition have also been targeted, and
many are now afraid to voice dissent.
New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) released a report in July
titled 'Occupied Palestinian Territories: New Arrests Highlight Abuses
by Hamas, Fatah'. Senior researcher Fred Abrahams says that the use of
torture has since increased.
A number of detainees have died both in Gaza and the West Bank.
Dr Ali Khashan, PA minister for justice, said his ministry was trying
to improve the situation by reinforcing the police and building up a
budget to help protect witnesses, the judiciary and detainees.
"We established a committee to monitor the violation of human rights
and have intervened in a number of cases where we disagreed with the
judiciary," Khishan told IPS.
A Palestinian committee established by human rights groups and
parliamentarians to monitor political detentions never got off the
ground. It had the blessing of Abbas, but the security services which
he controls refused to cooperate.
Hamas spokesman Ghazi Hamad told IPS that "Hamas is doing all it can to
protect civilians, including disarming large numbers of criminals and
gunmen from rival clans, in addition to allowing human rights
organisations access to prisoners."
However, neither authority has prosecuted any of its force members for
abuses that have included summary executions, maiming and torture.
According to the HRW report, "compounding the problem, the criminal
justice systems in Gaza and the West Bank are deeply flawed.
"In Gaza, after President Abbas ordered judges and other officials to
boycott judicial bodies in June 2007, Hamas began appointing new
prosecutors and judges, although it lacked the legal authority to do
so, and many have inadequate experience," the report says.
Punishing those responsible for attacking civilians is problematic due
to the judicial system in Gaza being split between Hamas and the PA.
"Hamas sacked the previous attorney-general affiliated with the PA and
appointed a new one. In response PA appointed judges and legislators
are boycotting the courts," Sourani told IPS.
Exacerbating the situation is the destruction visited on Palestinian
security installations and criminal justice facilities by the Israelis.
The movement of Palestinian security forces is severely restricted by
Israel, and permits are required to enter certain parts of the West
Bank under Israeli control, which can take time.
Israel has also given its de facto blessing to the use of excessive
force, and said the PA is obliged to carry this out under the Roadmap
peace plan. Israeli domestic intelligence chief Yuval Diskin recently
described security cooperation with the West Bank authorities as
"excellent, especially in combating terrorism." He spoke of the
shutting down of 60 civil institutions connected to Hamas.
Further problems hampering the Palestinian authorities is the lack of
independent oversight.
"With little investigative experience and no forensic facilities,
security forces continue to rely on a confession-based system, which
encourages the physical and psychological abuse of detainees," the HRW
report says
Source:Ocnus.net 2008
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