IMEU Logo
The Institute for Middle East Understanding offers journalists and editors quick access to information about Palestine and the Palestinians, as well as expert sources — both in the U.S. and in the Middle East. Read our Background Briefings. Contact us for story assistance. Sign up for e-briefings.
Institute for Middle East UnderstandingHuman Rights
Donate to IMEU
Home
News & Analysis
Commentary
From the Media
Factsheets
Life & Culture
Cuisine
Customs & Traditions
Film
Literature
Performing Arts
Visual Arts
Palestine in Photos
Art & Culture
Business & Economy
Daily Life
People
Politics
Palestinian Americans
Background Briefings
Documents & Reports
Development & Economy
Historical Documents
Human Rights
Politics & Democracy
Misc.
Maps
Links
Media Inquiries
About IMEU
Donate
Contact

Get E-mail News
Journalists & Editors: Sign up for e-mail briefings here.
Follow the IMEU on Twitter

EDITOR'S PICKS

On civil disobedience
Neve Gordon, The Palestine Chronicle


Gaza families demand answers
Ma'an News


Goldstone and the 'peace process'
George Giacaman, Bitterlemons.org


Advanced SearchSend/E-mail This PageShare/Save This PagePrint This PageAdvanced SearchAccess RSS Feed
Home > Documents & Reports > Human Rights
Barred from contact: Violation of the right to visit Palestinians held in Israeli prisons
Read the full report and accompanying testimonials on B'Tselem's website.

Israel holds in prison more than 9,000 Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The vast majority are held in prisons situated inside Israel 's sovereign territory, and not in the Occupied Territories.

Holding these prisoners and detainees in Israel flagrantly breaches international humanitarian law, which prohibits the transfer of civilians, including detainees and prisoners, from the occupied territory to the territory of the occupying state. Israel 's disregard for this prohibition is one of the main reasons that the prisoners and their families are unable to exercise their right to visits in a reasonable manner.

This report sheds light on the many difficulties and the suffering faced by the prisoners' families, residents of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, in their efforts to visit their relatives imprisoned in Israel .

Although Israel has the obligation to enable residents of the Occupied Territories to exercise their right to visit their relatives imprisoned in Israel , the task has been performed, since 1969, by the International Committee of the Red Cross. Relatives from the Occupied Territories who want to visit can do so only on the designated visiting days and on the transportation that the ICRC organizes, provided they received the relevant permit from the Israeli military authorities.

Because of the obstacles entailed in obtaining a permit to enter Israel , many Palestinians are able to visit their imprisoned relatives only once every few months. Many others are denied a permit and are thus unable to visit at all. In addition, the visit itself entails a grueling journey that can take almost 24 hours because of the checks and delays.

Israel's arbitrary and disproportionate policy not only infringes the right to family visits, it also results in violation of other rights and principles of international humanitarian and human rights law, as well as domestic Israeli law. Another consequence of the policy is the large number of minors, some of them only four or five years old, who make the visit alone, without an adult accompanying them. The visit, usually held behind a reinforced glass wall that does not allow any physical contact between the visitors and their imprisoned relatives, is a difficult experience in itself. The prohibition on physical contact also applies to all minors, age 6 and above, that are visiting their parents or siblings.

In light of the report's findings, B'Tselem urges the government of Israel to transfer all Palestinian prisoners to detention facilities inside the Occupied Territories . If the transfer requires the building of new facilities, Israel must ensure that it constructs the facilities while respecting the rights of the residents of the Occupied Territories, in particular their property rights.

Also, so long as Palestinians are held inside Israel, B'Tselem calls on the government of Israel to:

* ease the granting of permits to enter Israel for family visits;
* increase the speed and efficiency of issuing permits;
* take measures to shorten the travel time to and from the prison, and ease the hardships entailed in the visits;
* refrain from imposing a sweeping restriction on all minor children from making physical contact with the prisoners, and improve the conditions in which the prisoners and their relatives communicate with each other during the visits.


Advanced SearchSend/E-mail This PageShare/Save This PagePrint This PageAdvanced SearchAccess RSS Feed


FEATURED DOCUMENTS & REPORTS
The impact of two years of blockade
OCHA
Gaza: Killed holding a white flag
HRW
Children and education in Gaza
AIDA & OCHA

ALSO IN THIS SECTION
Israel escalates policy of political repression in East Jerusalem
Al-Haq (Feb 3, 2012) 

Humanitarian Crisis in the Gaza Strip
IMEU (Nov 2, 2011) 

Shifting paradigms: Israel's enforcement of the buffer zone in the Gaza Strip
Al-Haq (Sep 12, 2011) 

The Palestine Liberation Organization, the future State of Palestine, and the question of popular representation
DocumentCloud (Aug 27, 2011) 

A Pattern of Abuse Against American Citizens
IMEU (Jun 28, 2011) 

Israeli campaign to avoid accountability for Gaza war crimes must be rejected
Amnesty International (Apr 6, 2011) 

Amnesty International says U.S. Veto of UNSC Resolution Gives "Green Light" to Israel to Expand Illegal Settlements
Amnesty International (Feb 22, 2011) 

Israel: US Veto on Settlements Undermines International Law
Human Rights Watch (Feb 22, 2011) 

An Open Letter from Gaza: Two Years after the Massacre, a Demand for Justice
Gazan Civil Society (Dec 29, 2010) 

Israel/West Bank: Separate and Unequal
Human Rights Watch (Dec 21, 2010) 


Home > Documents & Reports > Human Rights > Barred from contact: Violation of the right to visit Palestinians held in Israeli prisons


All content ©2006-2011 Institute for Middle East Understanding

site designed by nigelparry.net